Navigate Namibia-03
Navigate Namibia-03
  • Namibia
    • Overview
    • Language
    • History
    • People
    • Books
    • T's & C's
    • Links
  • Travel
    • Travel Advice
    • Tours
    • Accomodations
    • Activities
    • Car Rental
    • Self-Drive
    • Getting There
    • Travel Insurance
  • Nature
  • Parks
    • All
    • Northern Namibia
    • Southern Namibia
    • Western Namibia
    • Central Namibia
    • Eastern Namibia
    • Communal Conservancies in Namibia
  • News

Eastern bark snake

Hemirhagerrhis nototaenia
Eastern Bark or Mopane snakes often shelter under loose bark.

Eastern bark snake

Introduction: Bark snakes are small tree livers with 2 curved fangs behind a set of 9 or 10 teeth. They are small, slender snakes with flattened heads. There are just the 2 species found in Namibia.

Eastern Bark or Mopane snakes (Hemirhagerrhis nototaenia) often shelter under loose bark in a savannah type habitat. This small, slender snake, does not bite.

Distribution: Zambezi Region (formerly the Caprivi Strip) through to Victoria Falls.

Diet: Day geckos, small skinks with the occasional small frog for afters. These snakes hang upside down from vegetation to eat their prey. Gecko eggs make great starters.

Colouring: The back is grey or grey-brown. A dark vertebral stripe, flanked by black spots forms zig-zags and crossbars along the back. The top of the head is black and the belly a dirty white.

Breeding: Females lay between 2 to 8 elongated eggs.

Size: Max SVL male 300mm, female 335mm.

Gondwana Collection Namibia (Pty) Ltd t/a Gondwana Travel Centre

2nd floor, Ardeco Building, Nelson Mandela Avenue (entrance Bassingthwaighte St.)
Klein Windhoek
Contacts
info@namibian.org
Copyright © 2025.  Gondwana Collection Namibia (Pty) Ltd t/a Gondwana Travel Centre 1998-2025