Atractaspis is a genus of in the family Atractaspididae, also known as the stiletto snakes. The genus is Endemism to Africa and the Middle East. The genus contains 15 species that are recognized by ITIS. Others recognize as many as 21 species." Atractaspis ". Dahms Tierleben. www.dahmstierleben.de/systematik/Reptilien/Squamata/Serpentes/colubroidea/lamprophiidae/Atractaspidinae.. www.reptile-database.org." Atractaspis ". Wikispecies. 23 are listed here.
A. andersonii | Boulenger, 1905 | Oman, Yemen | ||
A. aterrima | Günther, 1863 | ———— | slender burrowing asp | Africa: from Senegal and the Gambia east to DR Congo and Uganda. |
A. battersbyi | de Witte, 1959 | burrowing asp | Africa: Bolobo, on the Congo River basin, DR Congo. | |
A. bibronii | A. Smith, 1849 | bibronii rostrata | Gabriel Bibron burrowing asp | Southern Africa, from central Namibia, east to northern South Africa, north to south-eastern DR Congo, eastern Tanzania, coastal Kenya, and extreme southern coastal Somalia. |
A. boulengeri | Mocquard, 1897 | matschiensis mixta schmidti schultzei vanderborghti | Central African burrowing asp | Africa: the forests of the western Congo River basin. |
A. branchi | Rödel et al., 2019 | Branch's stiletto snake | Africa: from Liberia to Guinea | |
A. congica | Wilhelm Peters, 1877 | leleupi orientalis | Congo burrowing asp | Africa: from the mouth of the Congo River south to Angola, south-eastern DR Congo and northern Zambia. |
A. corpulenta | (Hallowell, 1854) | kivuensis leucura | fat burrowing asp | Africa: from Liberia to Ghana and from Nigeria eastwards to north-eastern DR Congo. |
A. dahomeyensis | Bocage, 1887 | ———— | Dahomey burrowing asp | Africa: from southwestern Cameroon, north and west through Nigeria, Benin, Togo, Ghana, north-western Ivory Coast, south-western Burkina Faso and south-central Mali. |
A. duerdeni | , 1907 | Duerden's burrowing asp | Africa in two isolated populations: one in north-central Namibia and one in south-eastern Botswana and northern South Africa. | |
A. engaddensis | Haas, 1950 | En-Gedi asp, alasawad alkhabith | Asia: Israel, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon | |
A. engdahli | Lönnberg & Andersson, 1913 | ———— | Theodore Engdahl burrowing asp | Africa: southern Somalia and the lower Juba River northwest into northeastern Kenya. |
A. fallax | W. Peters, 1867 | Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia | ||
A. irregularis | (J.T. Reinhardt, 1843) | angeli bipostocularis conradsi parkeri uelensis | variable burrowing asp | Africa: from Liberia to Ghana, from Nigeria east to Uganda, southern Sudan, and western and central Kenya, and south to north-eastern Tanzania, DR Congo and north-western Angola. |
A. leucomelas | Boulenger, 1895 | ———— | Ogaden burrowing asp | Africa: eastern Ethiopia, northwestern Somalia and Djibouti. |
A. magrettii | , 1928 | western Eritrea, northwestern Ethiopia, south-eastern Sudan | ||
A. microlepidota | Günther, 1866 | small-scaled burrowing asp | Africa: Senegal, Gambia, southern Mauritania, and western Mali | |
A. micropholis | Günther, 1872 | Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, Nigeria | ||
A. phillipsi | Thomas Barbour, 1913 | south-eastern Sudan | ||
A. reticulata | Sjöstedt, 1896 | brieni heterochilus | reticulate burrowing asp | Central Africa: from southern Cameroon, east to eastern DR Congo and south to Angola. |
A. scorteccii | Parker, 1949 | ———— | Somali burrowing asp | Africa: eastern Ethiopia and northern Somalia. |
A. watsoni | Boulenger, 1908 | Watson's burrowing asp | Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Central African Republic, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal |
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