iHerp Australia Issue 12 | Page 11

3 . kilometres west of Niue, in eastern Indonesia, and so how this isolated but related species evolved remains a mystery. This species, too, is sometimes placed in the separate genus Pseudolaticauda, together with its much larger cousin. What is the origin of the Niue sea krait? Did a few L. semifasciata find their way to Niue and establish a colony which evolved, in situ, on Niue. Or was L. semifasciata once widely distributed throughout the Pacific, eventually dying out except in the isolated waters of Niue, where it evolved into its present dwarf form. Hopefully the genetics of these species will soon answer such questions. Australians rightly regard many nearby Pacific islands as perfect holiday destinations - friendly people, tropical climates, warm waters and beautiful coral reefs - and are surprised and alarmed when they encounter large, conspicuously-banded snakes while snorkelling or strolling the shoreline. Given the snakes' presence in such large numbers, with such toxic venoms and effective delivery systems, it is fortunate for both locals and visitors alike that the sea snakes are almost invariably inoffensive and unwilling to bite, even when aggressively disturbed. All sea kraits are egg-layers (the Lake Te'nngano sea krait is reported to be a livebearer by some Rennell Islanders) but, having collected and released many hundreds of sea kraits during my work on this group, I have never seen eggs incubat- ing in the wild. Captive sea kraits will lay eggs that are reasonably easy to incubate and hatch, but in the wild the eggs are presumably deposited in inaccessible places such as deep within crevices in the coral limestone foreshores common amongst many islands, or within limestone caves accessible only through underwater openings. 1 . Laticauda schistorhyncha resting in a sea cave, Nuie. 2 . Habitat of L. schistorhyncha. 3 . The large eggs of the Black-banded Sea Krait. Oriomote Island, Ryukyu Islands, Japan.