Wall was a member of the Bombay Natural History Society and published more than 200 scientific articles, as well as the book A Popular Treatise on the Common Indian Snakes.[7] He described approximately 30 new species of snakes.[8]
In 1913, the third edition of his book, The poisonous Terrestrial Snakes of our British Indian Dominions, Including Ceylon, and How to Recognise Them; With Symptoms of Snake Poisoning and Treatment, was published.[9]
Along with Malcolm Arthur Smith, Wall is acknowledged as one of the two most important pioneers in the study of Indian herpetology.[citation needed]
Since Wall's death, some of his books, including Ophidia Taprobanica or The Snakes of Ceylon, have been republished.[10]
Bibliography
A Popular Treatise on the Common Indian Snakes (Bombay: 1900)
The Poisonous Terrestrial Snakes of Our British Indian Dominions Including Ceylon and how to Recognise Them: With Symptoms of Snake Poisoning and Treatment (Bombay: 1917)
A Monograph of the Sea Snakes (London: 1919)
Notes on Some Ceylon Snakes (Bombay: 1921)
Ophidia Taprobanica: Or, The Snakes of Ceylon (London: 1921)
References
^ ab"Deaths"(PDF). British Medical Journal (4664): 1279. 27 May 1950. PMC2038092.
^ abcBeolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Wall", p. 279).