Chinese scientists artificially hatch rare snakes
Share - WeChat
![]() |
| A pearl-banded rat snake at the Chengdu Institute of Biology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences on Aug 16, 2017. [Photo/VCG] |
Chinese scientists said they had successfully hatched some pearl-banded rat snakes, an endangered species peculiar to Sichuan province in Southwest China.
The mother snake laid the eggs about two months ago and baby snakes came out of eggs recently, said Dingli, deputy researcher at the Chengdu Institute of Biology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, on Sept 2.
The breeding marked an important step to understanding the species and the future protection, Ding said.
Because its habitat is quite limited and its wild population is rather small, it is difficult to fully understand this type of snake, Ding said.
Related Stories
- Shanxi ends province-wide blanket fireworks ban
- Audit: China fixes bulk of fiscal problems tied to 2024 budget
- China reports major gains in circular economy
- Chinese lawmakers review draft revision to banking supervision and regulation law
- Top legislature to study draft laws on environment, ethnic unity, national development planning
- Administrative organs must secure people's interests: senior judge

































