Vince_Adam Photography
IMG_9794-1(W) Malayan King Cobra (Ophiophagus bungarus)
Malay Peninsula.
Previously O.hannah, now O.bungarus.
In 2024, a new paper by Das., Shankar., Swamy., Williams., Lalremsanga., Prashanth., Sahoo., Vijayakumar, Höglund., Shanker., Dutta., Ganesh, & Wüster (2024) suggested that King Cobra consists of 4 species.
(1) Northern King Cobra (O. hannah),
eastern Pakistan, northern and eastern India, the Andaman Islands, Indo-Burma and Indo-China, south to central Thailand.
(2) Sunda king cobra (O. bungarus);
Malay Peninsular, Greater Sunda Islands and parts of the southern Philippines.
(3) Western Ghats king cobra (O. kaalinga)- Western Ghats of south-western India and
(4) Luzon king cobra (O. salvatana).
island of Luzon in northern Philippines.
These distinct genetic lineages are geographically isolated and adapted to specific ecological regions
IMG_9794-1(W) Malayan King Cobra (Ophiophagus bungarus)
Malay Peninsula.
Previously O.hannah, now O.bungarus.
In 2024, a new paper by Das., Shankar., Swamy., Williams., Lalremsanga., Prashanth., Sahoo., Vijayakumar, Höglund., Shanker., Dutta., Ganesh, & Wüster (2024) suggested that King Cobra consists of 4 species.
(1) Northern King Cobra (O. hannah),
eastern Pakistan, northern and eastern India, the Andaman Islands, Indo-Burma and Indo-China, south to central Thailand.
(2) Sunda king cobra (O. bungarus);
Malay Peninsular, Greater Sunda Islands and parts of the southern Philippines.
(3) Western Ghats king cobra (O. kaalinga)- Western Ghats of south-western India and
(4) Luzon king cobra (O. salvatana).
island of Luzon in northern Philippines.
These distinct genetic lineages are geographically isolated and adapted to specific ecological regions