I find myself getting more interested reptiles and amphibians lately, so i decided to start this thread to compliment the cool fish thread that was sadly deleted. In order to avoid that same fate here, i ask that you please refrain from posting about any potentially questionable activities here.
Now that that is out of the way, i'd like to start this off with a very cool and somewhat terrifying snake from Africa commonly known as the Stiletto snake.

Stiletto snakes belong to the genus Atractaspis and they have certain characteristics which make them unique among snakes. The most obvious one is their fangs, which they are able to move independently of one another outside of their mouths. Their primary use is while hunting mice that coexist with them in their underground habitat. When they come across a burrow containing juvenile mice, they stick their fangs out either side of their mouth and swing their heads side to side, envenomating them all and wiping out an entire litter.

This feature, along with their sharp, pointed tails, makes them nearly impossible to handle without getting bit, as they can manipulate their fangs to reach behind their head and inflict a bite on someone attempting to grab them this way. Given their underground lifestyle, however, bites are fairly rare and usually occur when they come to the surface following rain and people attempt to handle them having mistaken them for a non venomous snake. Their venom is cytotoxic and those who have ended up on the wrong side of it have suffered a number fatalities and amputations. There is currently no antivenom for a stiletto snake bite.

What cool herps do you know of that most people have never heard of?
Now that that is out of the way, i'd like to start this off with a very cool and somewhat terrifying snake from Africa commonly known as the Stiletto snake.

Stiletto snakes belong to the genus Atractaspis and they have certain characteristics which make them unique among snakes. The most obvious one is their fangs, which they are able to move independently of one another outside of their mouths. Their primary use is while hunting mice that coexist with them in their underground habitat. When they come across a burrow containing juvenile mice, they stick their fangs out either side of their mouth and swing their heads side to side, envenomating them all and wiping out an entire litter.

This feature, along with their sharp, pointed tails, makes them nearly impossible to handle without getting bit, as they can manipulate their fangs to reach behind their head and inflict a bite on someone attempting to grab them this way. Given their underground lifestyle, however, bites are fairly rare and usually occur when they come to the surface following rain and people attempt to handle them having mistaken them for a non venomous snake. Their venom is cytotoxic and those who have ended up on the wrong side of it have suffered a number fatalities and amputations. There is currently no antivenom for a stiletto snake bite.

What cool herps do you know of that most people have never heard of?