Wagler's Pit Viper

from $13.95
(Tropidolaemus wagleri) The Wagler's pit viper is a species I had always dreamed of finding in the wild. It's beauty is among the best of all vipers. It inhabits the southern portion of Southeast Asia, where it feeds on rodents and bird, as well as frogs and lizards. Wagler's pit vipers are sexually dimorphic, meaning that the males and females of the species can look vastly different. Males are mostly green with small red and white dots and stripes, while females, pictured here, appear as if a painter splattered green, yellow, and white on a black canvas. Adult males are a fraction of the weight of adult females.
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(Tropidolaemus wagleri) The Wagler's pit viper is a species I had always dreamed of finding in the wild. It's beauty is among the best of all vipers. It inhabits the southern portion of Southeast Asia, where it feeds on rodents and bird, as well as frogs and lizards. Wagler's pit vipers are sexually dimorphic, meaning that the males and females of the species can look vastly different. Males are mostly green with small red and white dots and stripes, while females, pictured here, appear as if a painter splattered green, yellow, and white on a black canvas. Adult males are a fraction of the weight of adult females.
(Tropidolaemus wagleri) The Wagler's pit viper is a species I had always dreamed of finding in the wild. It's beauty is among the best of all vipers. It inhabits the southern portion of Southeast Asia, where it feeds on rodents and bird, as well as frogs and lizards. Wagler's pit vipers are sexually dimorphic, meaning that the males and females of the species can look vastly different. Males are mostly green with small red and white dots and stripes, while females, pictured here, appear as if a painter splattered green, yellow, and white on a black canvas. Adult males are a fraction of the weight of adult females.