Erythrolamprus bizona, commonly known as the double-banded false coral snake, is a species of colubrid snake, which is endemic to northern South America and Central America.
It is found in Colombia, Venezuela,[4] Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama,[3] and on the island of Trinidad (in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago).
Similar in pattern to a coral snake, this species probably gains protection through mimicry.
It probably feeds mainly on other snakes.
It is often found in the leaf litter or burrowed in the soil in rain forests.
It burrows primarily near the Pouteria caimito, commonly known as the abiu, a tropical fruit tree, the nutrients of which supply the snake's clutch of eggs. In turn the tree is fertilized by the snake's urine and embryotic fluid.
Erythrolamprus bizona, commonly known as the double-banded false coral snake, is a species of colubrid snake, which is endemic to northern South America and Central America.