iHerp Australia Issue 12 | Page 8

1 . 2 . 3 . adjacent to large villages; the reptiles and humans living in complete harmony. The small coral island of Amédée, in the vast New Caledonian lagoon that also takes in the capital Noumea, has long been favoured as a holiday retreat by Japanese honeymooners. It is also home to large numbers of sea kraits that are closely related to the Yellow- lipped Sea Krait, but which were described in 2006 as a distinct New Caledonian species, Laticauda saintgironsi, that aggregates in rocky crevices and in the low vegetation which covers most of the island. Few honeymooners realise that they are sharing their picnic and bathing spots with hundreds of sea kraits! Probably the most beautiful of the sea kraits is the Dark-lipped Sea Krait (Laticauda laticaudata). Generally a much more slender species than the Yellow-lipped Sea Krait, and strongly banded like most other members of the genus, it is often the most striking bright blue in colour. Its habits are similar to other species in the group, and it is also an eel-eater. The Dark-lipped Sea Krait tends to be found in smaller numbers than the yellow- lipped species, and in smaller on-shore aggregations, but is nonetheless common. The largest of the sea kraits is the Black-banded Sea Krait, (Laticauda - or Pseudolaticauda; see earlier note - semifasciata), which ranges from Myanmar to Indonesia. It is the most heavy-bodied of the sea kraits and can grow to a length of about 1.5 metres.