Maïtena Dumont, Joshua Milgram, Anthony Herrel, Ron Shahar, Boaz Shacham, Céline Houssin, Arnaud Delapré, Raphaël Cornette, Marion Segall (2023)
Show Me Your Teeth And I Will Tell You What You Eat: Differences in Tooth Enamel in Snakes with Different Diets.
Integrative And Comparative Biology63: 265.
DOI: 10.1093/icb/icad028
Bartosz Borczyk (2023)
Sexual dimorphism in skull size and shape of Laticauda colubrina (Serpentes: Elapidae).
PeerJ11: e16266.
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.16266
Lachlan Pettit, Ruchira Somaweera, Shannon Kaiser, Georgia Ward-Fear, Richard Shine (2021)
The Impact of Invasive Toads (Bufonidae) on Monitor Lizards (Varanidae): An Overview and Prospectus.
The Quarterly Review of Biology96: 105.
DOI: 10.1086/714483
Yurii V. Kornilev, Nikolay D. Natchev, Harvey B. Lillywhite (2023)
Perils of ingesting harmful prey by advanced snakes.
Biological Reviews98: 263.
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12906
Shabnam Mohammadi, Lu Yang, Matthew Bulbert, Hannah M. Rowland (2022)
Defence mitigation by predators of chemically defended prey integrated over the predation sequence and across biological levels with a focus on cardiotonic steroids.
Royal Society Open Science9: .
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.220363
Marion Segall, Céline Houssin, Arnaud Delapré, Raphaël Cornette, Anthony Herrel, Joshua Milgram, Ron Shahar, Maïtena Dumont (2023)
Armed to the teeth: The underestimated diversity in tooth shape in snakes and its relation to feeding behavior and diet.
Ecology and Evolution13: .
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.10011
Henrik Bringsøe, Maneerat Suthanthangjai, Winai Suthanthangjai, Jo Lodder, Navapol Komanasin (2021)
Gruesome twosome kukri rippers: Oligodon formosanus (Günther, 1872) and O. fasciolatus (Günther, 1864) eat Kaloula pulchra Gray, 1831 either by eviscerating or swallowing whole.
Herpetozoa34: 49.
DOI: 10.3897/herpetozoa.34.e62688
Parinya Pawangkhanant, Nikolay A. Poyarkov, Harry Ward-Smith, Rupert Grassby-Lewis, Montri Sumontha, Nikita S. Kliukin, Sabira S. Idiiatullina, Alexei V. Trofimets, Chatmongkon Suwannapoom, Justin L. Lee (2024)
A new species of karst-associated kukri snake (Reptilia: Squamata: Colubridae: Oligodon Fitzinger, 1826) from southern Thailand.
Vertebrate Zoology74: 359.
DOI: 10.3897/vz.74.e112132
Harry W. Greene, Kevin D. Wiseman (2023)
Heavy, Bulky, or Both: What Does “Large Prey” Mean to Snakes?.
Journal of Herpetology57: .
DOI: 10.1670/22-068
Justin L. Lee, Platon V. Yushchenko, Chatmongkon Suwannapoom, Parinya Pawangkhanant, L. Lee Grismer, Tan Van Nguyen, V. Deepak, Surya Narayanan, Sandeep Das, Thy Neang, H.T. Lalremsanga, Jian-Huan Yang, Daniel Jablonski, Mustafa Erkaya, Gernot Vogel, Aaron M. Bauer, Nikolay A. Poyarkov (2024)
A multi-gene phylogeny of the Asian kukri snakes (Oligodon Fitzinger, 1826): Sharpening the blade of the second largest serpent radiation (Reptilia: Squamata: Colubridae).
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution201: 108215.
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108215
Henrik Bringsøe, James Holden (2021)
Yet another kukri snake piercing an anuran abdomen: Oligodon ocellatus (Morice, 1875) eats Duttaphrynus melanostictus (Schneider, 1799) in Vietnam.
Herpetozoa34: 57.
DOI: 10.3897/herpetozoa.34.e62689