The preferred natural habitat of R. batesii is forest, at altitudes from sea level to 1,300 m (4,300 ft).[1]
Description
The holotype of R. batesii has a total length (including tail) of 1.8 m (5.9 ft).[4] The smooth dorsal scales are arranged in 13 rows at midbody,[4] and the vertebral row is enlarged.[2]
R. batesii is a rear-fangedcolubrid, i.e., it has venom, which it may be able to inoculate by biting. Because very little is known about this species and its venom, it is necessary to be very cautious when working with it. This species has an almost identical defence mechanism to the boomslang (Dispholidus typus) and twig snakes (genus Thelotornis) as they also inflate their throat to make themselves look bigger. It is believed that the species of the genus Rhamnophis evolved between the boomslang and the species of the genus Thrasops in terms of their fangs and means of envenomation.[citation needed]
Boulenger GA (1908). "Descriptions of Three new Snakes from Africa". Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Eighth Series2: 93–94. (Thrasops batesii, new species, p. 93).
Chippaux J-P, Jackson K (2019). Snakes of Central and Western Africa. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 448 pp. ISBN978-1421427195. (Thrasops batesii, p. 371).
Schmidt KP (1923). "Contributions to the herpetology of the Belgian Congo based on the collection of the American Museum Congo Expedition, 1909–1915. Part II. Snakes, with field notes by Herbert Lang and James P. Chapin". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History49 (1): 1–146. (Rhamnophis batesii, new combination, p. 83).