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Most species of the Hydrophiinae are able to respire through the top of their skin.
Evidence for a similar process of adaptation has been found among the subfamily Hydrophiinae, which contain most sea snakes.
Laticauda is a genus of snakes from the subfamily Hydrophiinae.
Sea snakes (the Hydrophiinae, sometimes considered to be a separate family) have adapted to a marine way of life in different ways and to various degrees.
At best, Hydrophiinae make difficult captives.
Except for a single genus, all Hydrophiinae species are ovoviviparous; the young are born alive in the water where they live their entire lives.
Multilocus phylogeny and recent rapid radiation of the viviparous sea snakes (Elapidae: Hydrophiinae).
A Revision of the Sea Snakes of Subfamily Hydrophiinae.
A multivariate morphometric analysis and systematic review of Pseudonaja (Serpentes, Elapidae, Hydrophiinae)"."
Crocker's sea snake (Laticauda crockeri ) is a species of venomous snake in the subfamily Hydrophiinae.
Molecular evidence that the deadliest sea snake Enhydrina schistosa (Elapidae: Hydrophiinae) consists of two convergent species.
Hydrophis fasciatus, commonly known as the striped sea snake, is a species of venomous sea snake in the family Elapidae (Hydrophiinae).
Most Hydrophiinae are completely aquatic and have adapted to their environments in many ways, the most characteristic of which is a paddle-like tail that has improved their swimming ability.
The Hydrophiinae are mostly confined to the warm tropical waters of the Indian Ocean and the western Pacific Ocean, with a few species found well out into Oceania.
The Hydrophiinae, also known as coral reef snakes or sea snakes, are a subfamily of venomous elapid snakes that inhabit marine environments for most or all of their lives.
These findings were confirmed by a 2012 study, which compared the venoms of Toxicocalamus longissimus, a terrestrial species, and Hydrophis cyanocinctus, a marine species, both within the subfamily Hydrophiinae.
Laticauda species are the least adapted to sea life of all the members of Hydrophiinae; they retain the wide ventral scales typical of terrestrial snakes and have poorly developed tail fins.
Like their relatives in the Elapidae family, the majority of the Hydrophiinae species are highly venomous; however, when bites occur, venom injection is rare, so envenomation symptoms usually seem nonexistent or trivial.
H. semperi is usually classified in the subfamily Hydrophiinae of the family Elapidae, although in some classification schemes, it and the rest of the "true" sea snakes are instead grouped in the family Hydrophiidae.
The Sea Snake Specialist Group (SSSG) is concerned with the marine snakes of the elapid subfamilies Hydrophiinae and Laticaudinae, 62 species of true seasnakes, and eight species of sea kraits respectively.
Some taxonomists responded by moving the sea snakes to the Elapidae, thereby creating the subfamilies Elapinae, Hydrophiinae, and Laticaudinae, although the latter may be omitted if Laticauda is included in the Hydrophiinae.
Sea snakes were at first regarded as a unified and separate family, the Hydrophiidae, that later came to comprise two subfamilies: the Hydrophiinae, or true/aquatic sea snakes (now 16 genera with 57 species), and the more primitive Laticaudinae, or sea kraits (one genus, Laticauda, with five species).