Israeli Blind Snake or Israeli Worm Snake (Letheobia simoni), family Typhlopidae, Israel
photograph by Moshe Dahan

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Israeli Blind Snake or Israeli Worm Snake (Letheobia simoni), family Typhlopidae, Israel
photograph by Moshe Dahan

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Indotyphlops braminus aka Brahminy blind snake/Brahminy worm snake; source.
Worm snake on a termite nest By: Bruce Coleman Ltd. From: The Desert 1977
I couldn't decide which cute snake to design a naga after, so I made both! They're girlfriends. ❤️ More monstergirls to come as we get closer to my NSFW Patreon drop on Halloween! Stay tuned!! ✨
NSFW version and other NSFW drawings of them available HERE, and uncensored content will be available on my Patreon when it drops SOON!
Today's creature is the eastern worm snake! They are native to Massachusetts, Alabama, Louisiana, and Illinois and can be found in grasslands, wetlands, and forests. They spend most of the year underground. They mainly eat earthworms and larvae. They do not bite but can release an unpleasant odor to deter predators. They lay their eggs under rocks, within logs, and in piles of sawdust.

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went herping with a bud of mine and found a snake friend !!
14th of September 2024: Eurasian Blind Snake
Believe it or not, it is still Snake Saturday, though this time with the Eurasian Blind Snake (Xerotyphlops vermicularis). Snakes are divided into two infraorders true snakes (Alethinophidia) and wormsnakes (Scolecophidia). The Eurasian Blind Snakes belong to the latter, and are in fact the only wormsnakes native to Europe [1].
They are burrowing snakes, and are generally found in open areas with sparse vegetation [2]. This has included being beneath stones at both the base and the top of a mountain [3], under stone fragments within the city walls of a castle [4], in a garden house, and in a bed in someone’s house [5]. They were originally discovered in Greece [3], but have since been found as far east as Tajikistan [2].
They are around 20-30 cm in length [4, 5]. Aside from all of the locations above, they have also been found in termite mounds and ants nests [2]. Unsurprisingly, they mostly eat ants and other small invertebrates [3]. They may also be found in holes pre-burrowed by actual worms [2].
Their labelling has been home to other species as well in the past, including some such as X. syriacus that were synonymised and then subsequently desynonymised (a process which isn’t helped when the museum holding the original specimen is destroyed in a bombing in World War II). Even now, the high genetic diversity within the Eurasian Blind Snake leaves suspicions open that there may be several species hiding under this name [6].
Sources: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [Image]
Wild & wonderful!