Atheris desaixi
Atheris desaixi, commonly known as the Mount Kenya bush viper, Ashe's bush viper, or Desaix's bush viper, is a venomous species of viper endemic to Kenya, where only two isolated populations are known. It is known for its striking black and yellow coloration. No subspecies are currently recognized.
Etymology
This species, A. desaixi, is named in honor of Frank DeSaix, an American Peace Corps volunteer who collected the first specimen.Description
Adults of A. desaixi average 40–60 cm in total length, with a maximum total length of. Newborns measure in total length. In Ashe's original 1968 description, adults were reported to grow to an average 49–68 cm total length, with a head and body length of and a tail length of.The eyes are set well forward in the head and are surrounded by 14–17 scales. Interorbital scales number 8–11. The eye is separated from the nasal by two to three scales and from the supralabials by two. Upper labials: 10–12. Sublabials: 11–14. The rostral scale is not as wide as it is long, while its upper margin is highest at the center. The rostral is also accompanied by an even number of suprarostrals. The superciliary scales above the eyes are not enlarged. The nasal scale is round and single, or partially divided.
Midbody, the dorsal scale rows number 24–31. The dorsal scales are short and heavily keeled. However, on the upper dorsals the keels terminate before the end of each scale. On the lower dorsals, the keels are serrated. The ventral scale count is 160–174. In females the subcaudals number 41–54. One male specimen had 53 subcaudals.
The color pattern consists of a greenish-black to charcoal-black ground color, while each scale is tipped with yellow or yellowish-green, giving the animal a speckled appearance. Some scales have more of this color to them and form a series of loops along the sides of the body. These loops may fuse into zigzag patterns posteriorly, fading again on the tail. Anteriorly, the venter is yellow or yellowish, fading towards a purplish-black towards the rear and under the tail, except for the tip that is blotched with yellow. Juveniles are mainly yellow with a white tipped tail. This darkens as they grow until they reach the adult color phase at a total length of about.
Distribution and habitat
There are two isolated populations of A. desaixi in Kenya: one in the forests at Chuka, south-eastern Mount Kenya, and the other near Igembe in the northern Nyambeni range. The type locality is listed as "near Chuka, Lat. 0° 20' S, Long. 37° 35' E, in rain forest at an altitude of c. ", Kenya.The original specimens, for which field notes were taken, were found in dense rain forest at, collected in clearings and along pathways in the dense foliage about above the ground. The conditions were very humid and all specimens were collected within a radius. In this environment, their coloration offers them an excellent camouflage, making them very difficult to spot.
Behavior
Little is known of the behavior of A. desaixi. It is obviously arboreal, moving slowly and deliberately among the branches of its habitat as other Atheris species do, but it is unknown when daily peak activity occurs. In captivity, it is just as willing to accept food during the day as at night.When captured, it will strike readily and struggle vigorously in the hand. It may also perform a characteristic, stridulating threat display, in which counterlooped coils and the lower serrated, keeled scales are rubbed against one another to produce a loud hissing noise. However, captive specimens soon calm down and this behavior is lost.