Species overview
King Cobra
King Cobra is an alert snake that relies on cover, thermal gradients, and ambush or active foraging depending on conditions.
Range
India through Southeast Asia
Habitat
rainforests, bamboo thickets, mangrove swamps
Scientific
Ophiophagus hannah
Group
Snake
Size
4-5.5 m
Lifespan
20+ years
Diet
primarily other snakes, plus monitor lizards
Status
Endangered
Husbandry snapshot
Only advanced venom labs with large vertical enclosures can house them.
Keeping king cobra healthy hinges on replicating wild rhythms. Build a thermal gradient that matches natural basking and cooldown cycles, provide humidity pockets that echo its native rainforests, bamboo thickets, mangrove swamps, and anchor enrichment to natural behaviors (foraging, climbing, burrowing, or basking). Rotate hides, logs, and branch angles monthly to keep muscles engaged and prevent stereotypy. Diet variety, aligned with the species’ primarily other snakes, plus monitor lizards, backs up the enclosure design to support immune health and growth.
Biosecurity matters even for hardy snake species: dedicated tools per enclosure, routine fecal checks, and quarantine for any newcomers. Log every interaction in a shared record so trends surface early, temperature drift, appetite dips, or shedding delays are easier to catch with consistent notes.
Conservation lens
Forest connectivity and anti-snake-skin campaigns are vital.
In the wild, king cobra faces pressure from habitat change, climate swings, and trade. When keeping this species, align with legal and ethical standards: captive-bred sourcing, microchipping where required, and transparent origin paperwork. Support field partners in the India through Southeast Asia by contributing data (shed samples, growth logs) to comparative studies, or by funding on-the-ground monitoring that protects nesting sites and prey bases.
Deep dives
Choose a workbook to explore King Cobra in context.
Field notes
Observers note that king cobra often shifts microhabitats across the day, using basking sites at dawn, moving to shaded cover by midday, and returning to edge zones at dusk. Map these patterns inside the enclosure: vertical climbs, shaded retreats, and varied substrates encourage natural circulation. In situ, the species’ king cobra is an alert snake that relies on cover, thermal gradients, and ambush or active foraging depending on conditions. underscores the need for mental stimulation; replicate it with scatter feeding, scent trails, or puzzle feeders.
If you work in the field, pre-plan data sheets: record GPS, weather, behavior codes, and microhabitat notes. Photos with size references (rulers, known rocks) help calibrate growth models later. Share sanitized data to open repositories when safe for the population.
Quick reference
- Target temps: match basking vs. ambient noted in native range; verify with probes monthly.
- UV/lighting: tune fixtures to species ecology (forest edge vs. open country) and log UVI readings.
- Enrichment: rotate hides, branches, dig boxes, or swim zones to mirror wild microhabitats.
- Health: weigh monthly; track sheds, appetite, and behavior; schedule annual vet exams.
- Ethics: captive-bred sourcing, legal permits, and support for field conservation partners.