Chennai:A rare specimen of an albino striped narrow-headed snake (Xylophis perroteti) was spotted in the Nilgiris forest area in Tamil Nadu on Friday.
Raising curiosity over the strange snake found in Sholur village located in a hillock in the Southern Western Ghats, the wildlife activists alerted the district forest officials, who in turn instructed them to bring the snake to Ooty Government Arts College. The wildlife researchers huddled in a room to confirm whether the discovered snake was a rare species. To their surprise, the reptile was confirmed as an 'albino species'.
According to the researchers who discovered the snake, albinism is the process by which an organism's skin turns white. Furthermore, it has been suggested that albinism is a genetic disorder. Explaining the cause of the deficiency, the researchers said, "While wild animals are being isolated due to forest fragmentation, it results in isolation of population. During such forays, the wild animals are forced to have inbreeding within the population leading to a genetic disorder.
"This snake is found in high ranges of the Western Ghats over 1,500 meters altitude in Kerala and Tamil Nadu. Very few studies have
been carried out on this species, mostly only short notes. Moreover, such a snake is non-venomous, and often lives in the crevices of soil, rocks, and leaves, and eats only earthworms and small creatures. The shape of the snake is cylindrical," said P. Kannan, an assistant professor of Thiru.Vi.Ka College in Thiruvarur, who specializes in the study of reptiles and amphibians.