Scientific name ‘Kaalinga’ officially assigned to Western Ghat King Cobra species


Team Udayavani, Nov 9, 2024, 8:46 AM IST

Bengaluru: In a proud moment for Karnataka, the famous king cobra species found in the Western Ghats has been officially given the name “Kaalinga,” showcasing Kannada heritage in global scientific nomenclature. This unique recognition adds a feather to the cap of Karnataka’s Statehood Day golden jubilee celebrations.

Renowned herpetologist Dr. P. Gowri Shankar, from Agumbe’s Kalinga Foundation, led the study that resulted in naming this species “Ophiophagus kaalinga,” putting a distinctly Kannada mark on scientific literature. This unique naming is set to be officially declared by Karnataka’s Forest Minister, Eshwar Khandre, on November 22 at the J.N. Tata Auditorium in Bengaluru, during an event aptly titled “Namma Kaalinga” (Our Kaalinga).

Globally, the king cobra family includes four distinct species. The Northern King Cobra (Ophiophagus hannah) is found in East Pakistan, North and East India, the Andaman Islands, and Southeast Asia. The Sunda King Cobra (Ophiophagus bungarus) inhabits South Philippines, and the Luzon King Cobra (Ophiophagus salvatanus) is exclusive to North Philippines. The “Ophiophagus kaalinga” name is now attributed to the distinct king cobra variant endemic to India’s Western Ghats.

Researchers identified these king cobra species based on minor differences in coloration, body scale patterns, and certain subtle physical variations. For instance, the Ophiophagus kaalinga has fewer than 40 body bands, while the bungarus subspecies has over 70. The hannah species has between 50 to 70 bands, whereas salvatanus exhibits none. These differences, noted Dr. Gowrishankar, are evident through DNA analysis, and scale examination.

Dr. Gowri Shankar, who has long been fascinated by reptiles, began his official study on king cobras in 2012, although initial research on the Kaalinga species dates back to 1836. His breakthrough study after nearly 185 years has redefined this unique Western Ghats species.

“The earlier research classified four types of king cobra. This time, we have progressed further by giving these species a distinct name. Usually, scientific names are in Greek or Latin. We gave the Western Ghats’ snake species a Kannada name “kaalinga” in honour of the Karnataka people for their reverence and worship towards this snake,” shared Dr. Gowri Shankar, clearly moved by this historic achievement.

Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.

Top News

FSSAI directs online platforms to deliver food items with minimum 45 day shelf life

Maharashtra Elections | PM Modi has eliminated terrorism, Naxalism; Article 370 not coming back: Amit Shah

India successfully test-fires long-range cruise missile

COP29: UN climate chief calls for urgent climate action to counter economic fallout, inflation

Time to make changes in ‘land grabber’ Waqf Board, says Amit Shah at Jharkhand rally

Cong releases manifesto for J’khand polls, promises caste-based census, free power

35 killed, 43 injured as driver hits crowd in Chinese city

Related Articles More

Lokayukta raided 9 govt officials in Karnataka

Chikkamagaluru: Guns found in house, Maoist movement suspected

Ballari: House lizard found in midday meal, more than 26 students fall ill

Parashurama Statue Case: Demand raised for arrest of remaining accused

Liquor worth over Rs 29 crore seized from Channapatna Assembly segment: EC

MUST WATCH

Punganur Cow

Rangoli design

Jagadeesh Nagaraj Kudupali Audio Viral

Gho Pooja in Deepavali Festival

Melukote Deepavali


Latest Additions

FSSAI directs online platforms to deliver food items with minimum 45 day shelf life

Maharashtra Elections | PM Modi has eliminated terrorism, Naxalism; Article 370 not coming back: Amit Shah

Ayodhya: Security beefed up around Ram Temple after ‘threat’ by pro-Khalistan leader Pannun

India successfully test-fires long-range cruise missile

Blind T20 WC: Indian team eyes clearance from MHA, MEA; Sports Ministry clears travel to Pakistan

Thanks for visiting Udayavani

You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.