THE BA TRA CHIANS. 
149 
carmine bands become paler and more of a vermilion hue, and for the last four inches there 
are no red bands, the black and yellow alternating equally. The extreme tip of the tail is 
yellow. The Bead Snake never attains any great size, seldom exceeding two feet in length. 
It is very remarkable that the terrible Labakri Snake of South America ( Elaps 
lemniscdtus ) should be closely allied to and belong to the same genus as the bead Snake of 
the Northern States. Mr. Waterton states that this Serpent is fond of lying coiled on a 
stump of a tree or some bare spot of ground, where it can hardly be distinguished from the 
object on which it is reposing. The same writer remarks in a letter to me, that “the Labarri 
Snake has fangs, and is mortally poisonous when adult. It exhibits the colors of the rainbow 
when alive, but these colors fade in death. I have killed Labarri Snakes eight feet long.” 
We now arrive at a most curious family, known by the possession of very long poison- 
fangs, perforated, and permanently erect. They only include one genus, of which the best 
known species is the Narrow-headed Dexdeaspis (Dendraspis angusticeps). 
This Serpent is very long, slender, and unusually active and a good climber, exceeding 
the haje in this accomplishment. It is found in Southern Africa, and is tolerably common at 
Natal. Its color is olive-brown washed with green above, and a paler green below. It is 
rather a large though very slender Snake, sometimes reaching the length of six feet. 
The last example of the Serpent tribe is the Atractaspis of Southern Africa ( Atractaspis 
irregularis). The fangs of this Snake are longer in proportion than those of any other known 
Serpent, reaching nearly to the angle of the mouth. They are so long, indeed, that Dr. Smith 
is of opinion that the creature cannot open its mouth sufficiently wide to erect the fangs fully, 
so that the poison-teeth are always directed backwards. They still, however, serve an impor- 
tant purpose ; for when the Atractaspis seizes its prey, the poison-fangs necessarily pierce the 
skin, so as to inject the venom into the body of the victim, and from their shape act as 
grapnels, by which all attempts at escape are foiled. Very little is known of the habits of this 
Snake, but it is thought to burrow in loose ground. 
The color of the Atractaspis is blackish-green above, shaded with orange-brown, and 
orange-buff below. It is a small Serpent, rarely measuring more than two feet in length. 
THE BATRACHIANS. 
' FROGS AND TOADS. 
The Batrachiahs are separated from the true reptiles on account of their peculiar 
development, which gives them a strong likeness to the fishes, and affords a good ground for 
considering these animals to form a distinct order. On their extrusion from the egg, they 
bear no resemblance to their parents, but are in a kind of intermediate existence, closely anal 
ogous to the caterpillar or larval state of insects, and called by the same name. Like the fish, 
they exist wholly in the water, and breathe through gills instead of lungs, obtaining the need- 
ful oxygen from the water which washes the delicate gill-membranes. At this early period 
they have no external limbs, moving by the rapid vibration of the flat and fan-like tail with 
which they are supplied. While in this state, they are popularly called tadpoles, those of the 
frog sometimes bearing the provincial name of pollywogs. The skin of the Batrachians is 
not scaly, and in most instances is smooth and soft. Further peculiarities will be mentioned 
in connection with the different species. 
These creatures fall naturally into two sub-orders — the leaping or tail-less Batrachians, 
and the crawling Batrachians. The leaping Batrachians, comprising the frogs and toads, are 
familiar in almost all lands. 
