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Scientists describe a new Himalayan snake species found via Instagram1

Locked down at home during the pandemic last year, a postgraduate student in India’s Himalayan region photographed a snake in his backyard that experts had never before seen.

December 04, 2021 / 11:38 IST
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Virendar Bhardwaj uploaded this photo of a snake in his backyard in Himachal Pradesh. It was later found to be an undescribed species. Photo by Virender Bhardwaj.

Researchers have found a snake species new to science in the Himalayas — on Instagram!

During the COVID-19 lockdowns, Virender Bhardwaj, a master’s student at Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar, explored the backyard of his house in Chamba at the foot of the Himalayas. He began photographing the snakes, lizards, frogs, and insects around the home and uploading those photos to the social media platform, Instagram.

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In one of these posts, uploaded on June 5, 2020, Zeeshan A. Mirza, a herpetologist from the National Centre for Biological Sciences in Bengaluru noticed an unfamiliar snake. The snake belonged to a group commonly called kukri snakes, named after their teeth which are curved like a kukri, or Nepali dagger. But this specimen didn’t match the common kukri snake of the region.

Bhardwaj was able to locate two of the snakes, enough for the team, which included Mirza and Harshil Patel of Veer Narmad South Gujarat University, Surat, western India, to begin the identification process.

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