PUFF ADDERS. 83 
The genus C/otho consist of the terrible Puff Adders of Africa, of 
which there are at least four or five species. Among the best known 
of them are the ordinary Puff Adder (C. arietans), and the Berg Adder 
(C. atropos) of the Cape colonists. The Rhinoceros Puff Adder (C. 
nasicornts of Guinea) has the scales over the nostrils of the male 
produced into a long re-curved spine ; and in the Horned Puff Adder 
(C. cornuta, Fig. 20) of South Africa there is a group of small horn- 
like scales over each eye. Examples of the Common and of the 
Fig. 20.—The Horned Puff Adder. 
Rhinoceros Puff Adders may generally be seen in the reptile house of 
the London Zoological Gardens. The last-mentioned is a huge 
Viper of wondrous beauty, both of colouring and in the complex 
pattern of its markings, especially as seen when it has newly shed 
its epidermis; but the aspect of its surprisingly broad, flat, and 
triangular-shaped head, unmistakably betokens its terrific powers. 
Its head is remarkably massive. One peculiarity of the Puff Adders 
is that they sometimes hold on to their victim by their long fangs. 
Thus, of the common C. arie¢ans Sir A. Smith remarks that ‘although 
generally inactive, it is by no means so when attacked—its move- 
ments are then bold and energetic, and when once it seizes the ob- 
