Reptile & Amphibian News Blog
Keep up with news and features of interest to the reptile and amphibian community on the kingsnake.com blog. We cover breaking stories from the mainstream and scientific media, user-submitted photos and videos, and feature articles and photos by Jeff Barringer, Richard Bartlett, and other herpetologists and herpetoculturists.
Friday, May 31 2013
By
Fri, May 31 2013 at 13:45
Incubating now the 1st clutch of Extreme Red Hypo Anaconda's..these will be amazing!!
Email me for details at Extremehogs@live.com
Justin Mitcham
A fossil stored unnoticed in a museum may hold the secret to a question that's plagued scientists for decades: How did the turtle get his shell?
From Boston.com:
It’s a question so obvious a schoolchild can ask it, but for more than a century, consensus has eluded the paleontologists and evolutionary biologists who study the reptiles and their bony carapaces. Now, a group of scientists at Yale University and the Smithsonian Institution argue that a reptile fossil that’s been gathering dust in museum collections is actually a turtle ancestor, and that its reduced number of ribs, distribution of muscles, and T-shaped ribs could help settle the question once and for all.
In a new paper published Thursday in the journal Current Biology, they unveil the argument that a 260 million-year-old creature called Eunotosaurus africanus was a turtle ancestor, hoping to help resolve a debate that has split the scientific community for decades.
Read all about it here.
Photo: Tyler Lyson/Boston.com
This image of a Racer, uploaded by kingsnake.com user piglet, is our herp photo of the day!
Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here!
Thursday, May 30 2013
I derive great pleasure from feeding wild birds. The squirrel-proof hanging feeder has been in the same place in a tall crepe myrtle shrub outside my office window for years, and many common and a few uncommon birds visit it daily or occasionally.
One day, a couple of years ago, I swiveled my chair to watch the feeder, wondered why there was no bird activity, and saw that the feeder had a second watcher. Coiled in a tree crotch within easy striking distance of the feeder was a 30 inch long yellow rat snake, Pantherophis obsoletus quadrivittatus. I guess he was hoping for a bird dinner but the sharp-eyed avians had spotted the snake and temporarily boycotted the feeder.
Well, my freezer is never without a couple hundred mice, so I chose and thawed one of appropriate size, grabbed some forceps and mouse and visited the snake-shrub. Although I moved slowly, as I neared the shrub the snake began flickering its tongue and drew its head back into its coils.
Continue reading "A Striped Visitor"
This image of an Eastern Worm Snake, uploaded by kingsnake.com user corythreatt, is our herp photo of the day!
Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here!
Wednesday, May 29 2013
We actually found some good news about amphibians. No, really.
From the Vancouver, Canada, Globe and Mail:
Scientists at the Vancouver Aquarium have sprung into action, as part of an effort to prevent an endangered frog population from becoming extinct in eastern British Columbia.
The Rocky Mountain population of northern leopard frogs plummeted by the millions in the 1970s, and only two populations are now known to exist near Creston, in B.C.’s West Kootenay region.
The aquarium announced Thursday its scientists have, for the first time in Canada, bred the species in an aquarium setting and created an assurance — or backup — population.
Dennis Thoney, the aquarium’s director of animal operations, said officials plan to release about 2,000 tadpoles Monday in the Columbia Marshes near the east Kootenay city of Cranbrook, while maintaining a population at the aquarium.
Read more here. And try to smile.
Photo: Adult Northern leopard frogs. (Vancouver Aquarium)
This image of a Ringneck, uploaded by kingsnake.com user cochran, is our herp photo of the day!
Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here!
Tuesday, May 28 2013
With each passing year, as the various exporting countries close or open their seasons and/or shipping quotas the herps we see in the pet trade change. Availability of some changes from abundance to rarity, of others from rarity to abundance.
Two examples are the Colombian horned frog, Ceratophrys calcarata, and wild caught examples of the coveted red-tailed boa, Boa constrictor constrictor.
The former, once available in the thousands each breeding season, have not been available for decades and likewise for the boa, although far fewer numbers were involved.
Those among us who are keepers (yes, I am one) owe each and every animal, be their cost mere pennies or thousands of dollars, the best of conditions and care. Research each species before acquisition, and then acquire only those that you can care for adequately and with relative ease.
Continue reading "Are you a keeper?"
After treatment at Marathon's Turtle Hospital for digestive tract impaction, a loggerhead sea turtle was returned to the ocean off of the Florida Keys on Friday.
From Nature World News:
The roughly 6-pound, foot-long animal nicknamed “Charley” was first located by a fisherman who spotted it floating in a patch of weeds 22 miles off of the Middle Keys.
Upon examination veterinarians discovered that Charley had ingested a small piece of plastic, causing its digestive system to become impacted.
Richie Maroetti, Turtle Hospital founder and director, said in a statement that turtles sometimes confuse plastic with one of their favorite food sources: jellyfish.
"It plugged up her bowel and she started to float," Moretti said. "We gave her some antibiotics and gave her a little Metamucil and she's just much better.”
Ultimately, however, Charley’s struggle is symptomatic of a much larger problem, Moretti warns.
"We just gotta keep plastic out of our ocean," he said.
Read the rest of the story here.
Photo : Florida Keys & Key West News Flash
This image of a Copperhead, uploaded by kingsnake.com user LSU_Tigress, is our herp photo of the day!
Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here!
Monday, May 27 2013
By
Mon, May 27 2013 at 13:20
I have a female Mississippi Mud Turtle and I am looking to give it a good home. Free to a good home, breeding is possible. I also have some materials for the tank setup if needed.
Check out this video "Corn Snake Morphs," submitted by kingsnake.com user boa2cobras.
Submit your own reptile & amphibian videos at http://www.kingsnake.com/video/ and you could see them featured here or check out all the videos submitted by other users!
This image of an Eastern Diamondback, uploaded by kingsnake.com user Bwood, is our herp photo of the day!
Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here!
Friday, May 24 2013
By
Fri, May 24 2013 at 23:48
I rescued my little gecko from animal control a year ago, and I have been 2 reptile vets in the Bay Area since. I don't know how old he is. He is a wonderful gecko with a nice temperament, so I have tried to help him.
Right when I got him I realized he had a whitish thing about 1 in long "growing" out of his pre-anal pores - it was as wide as his pre-anal pores too - maybe a 1/4'' wide. It wasn't a prolapse. The vet basically pulled it out of him and left a sore on his underbelly. The vet called it a hormonal secretion build up - she wasn't sure. It looked infected. I gave him medicine. He healed up pretty quickly. Then I saw the thing growing back just a few months later. It started as little white sheets of skin. No irritation. It wasn't his shedding skin either. Then Dec. 2012 he seemed to be getting the big "plug" sticking out again. It quickly progressed to looking very infected. He was biting at it so it looked bruised around his lower belly. I took him to a new reptile vet… She started by pulling the plug out again. It was very infected. She felt his lower stomach and found a large hard lump inside. She put him under anesthesia and pulled the 2nd thing/tumor out through his anal pore sore from inside his body. It was very large (about 1x1''). She said she had no idea what it was and gave it to me in a preservative bottle so I could have it tested. She had me put the same cream on the sore and give him antibiotics by mouth for 2 weeks. He stopped eating much at all for months but he was so plump to begin with that it didn't affect his weight much. The whole thing really upset him.
I've been watching his pores for the last 6 months, since he last went to the vet. Recently he had a new "plug" coming out of his most central pre anal pore. So the middle one looked clogged with a tiny "plug" and I pulled it out myself, leaving a small sore behind. This was a month ago. He has shedded twice since then. His belly and feet have had trouble shedding so I usually help. 2 sheds ago, I pulled the skin off under his belly right at the anal pore site, which kind of pulled out the new light colored plug (maybe it's a scab?) and left behind an uninfected, pinkish little hole which I dabbed his cream on and healed quickly. Then after his most recent shed about a week ago, I decided to leave the skin at his sore site alone to make sure the little hole healed. Until yesterday… I pulled off the little piece of skin and under it looked like a little smooth pink piece of tissue/tumor protruding just slightly through that same center pre anal pore.. I touched around it and it feels like that's just part of a larger thing inside him (very similar to the thing the infected thing vet felt and removed that he had been biting at). It's the early stages this time and maybe someone could remove it with less difficulty than last time. The area seems red and inflamed today so I am thinking it might be infected again. I also think that's why his previous owner took him to animal control to get rid of him.
Regarding husbantry: I keep a clean water bowl in his cage as well as a bigger, under-tank heated pool of water made with a ceramic bowl. He eats mostly meal worms and some wax worms. I used to keep crickets all the time but he is afraid of them. I dust all his worms with high quality multi and calcium/D3. He is way too small for a mouse - about 6'' long in total. He was tested at the vet for parasites and has none.
I know very little about all of this, and my reptile vets know very little. This will definitely be an ongoing problem and I am going to have to give him up if I can't find some way to manage this. It's a very expensive issue and stressful.
Please let me know your thoughts.
Basically what I'd like to know is if anyone has ever encountered the recurring tumor my gecko has. Also, is it possibly malignant? He has had the tumors for at least a year.
Thomas Cobb's snakes: Many of us have followed the Thomas Cobb situation in Utah in which Cobb was unaware of a city ordinance requiring a permit to keep exotic animals. The language of the ordinance was ambiguous, and although some citizens wanted officials to enforce that Cobb only be allowed one pet, Cobb prevailed and was granted 29 permits for his 29 boa constrictors.
Cobb did a remarkable job representing the herp community, remaining professional and level-headed at all times. Not enough can be said about his dedication to present herp keepers in a positive light.
Thank you for being a responsible and dedicated herper, Thomas. Thank you to everyone who supported, and continues to support, Thomas, as well.
Shipping news: Legislation has been introduced to solve an interstate transport issue for exporting certain snake species. Under current ruling, if a shipment must stop anywhere in the U.S. after departure, it is considered interstate commerce even though the plane is merely stopping to refuel or add freight before leaving the country.
The proposed legislation will allow for export even when the shipment must pass through intermediate airports that are not designated ports. The ruling that listed several snake species as injurious under the Lacey Act has resulted in many headaches for anyone exporting these large constrictor snake species.
The snakes included in this bill are: Burmese python, Indian python, Northern and Southern African pythons and Yellow anaconda.
Photo of Thomas Cobb and son, Caiden Scott G Winterton, Deseret News
Continue reading "Thomas Cobb to keep his snakes"
Supermodel Cara Delevingne was quite the herp-loving little girl, reports heatworld.com.
Cara then:
Cara now:
Whether you grow up to strut the runway, crack genetic codes, or rule the world, just keep on herpin', little girls!
This image of a Biak Green Tree Python, uploaded by kingsnake.com user AJ01, is our herp photo of the day!
Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here!
Thursday, May 23 2013
The late spring sun shown brightly and the woodlands were verdant with newly greened leaves. Crows cawed over head and a broad-winged hawk circled lazily. I was clambering over some sizable tumbled boulders. To my left was a roller coaster that, come sundown, would be zipping boisterous, screaming, throngs up and down inclines that I didn’t even want to imagine and around hairpin curves that I wanted to think about even less.
To my right the boulder field eased and the greenery encroached tightly. I had been told that here, amidst the very rocks I was now traversing, northern copperheads, Agkistrodon contortrix mokasen, denned, foraged, bred, and underwent their quiet lives unseen and unsuspected by the amusement park employees and attendees.
I wasn’t sure that I believed this, for although I knew the rocks to be home to garter snakes and black racers, I was one of the many who never had suspected the presence of a pit viper of any kind. And so far on this glorious spring day my total for snakes seen was zero.
I had made my way, slowly and searchingly, across the expanse of boulders and was about to carefully make the return. In preparation I stepped out into the woodland, and stood for a moment listening to the sounds of the wild. Birds on their spring migration were cheeping, chirping, and lisping overhead. I listened for a few minutes, then turned to begin my return.
Ahead of me, among hundreds of others, was a flat, foliage surrounded, sun-drenched, rock. And what was that spot of orange on it? I looked more closely. Neonate copperhead.
The tales were true, and this day would live forever in memory.
Continue reading "A Glorious Copperhead Kind of Day"
In a nice change of pace from news of species and habitat loss worldwide, meet the ten newly identified species scientists have selected as the best and most interesting of last year -- including a new snake and a new frog.
From Science Daily:
An amazing glow-in-the-dark cockroach, a harp-shaped carnivorous sponge and the smallest vertebrate on Earth are just three of the newly discovered top 10 species selected by the International Institute for Species Exploration at Arizona State University. A global committee of taxonomists -- scientists responsible for species exploration and classification -- announced its list of top 10 species from 2012 today, May 23.
Meet the world's newest snake:
No to the Mine! Snake
Sibon noalamina
Country: Panama
Snail-eating snake: A beautiful new species of snail-eating snake has been discovered in the highland rainforests of western Panama. The snake is nocturnal and hunts soft-bodied prey including earthworms and amphibian eggs, in addition to snails and slugs. This harmless snake defends itself by mimicking the alternating dark and light rings of venomous coral snakes. The species is found in the Serranía de Tabasará mountain range where ore mining is degrading and diminishing its habitat. The species name is derived from the Spanish phrase "No a la mina" or "No to the mine."
Next, the world's smallest and newest frog:
World's Smallest Vertebrate
Paedophryne amanuensis
Country: New Guinea
Tiny frog: Living vertebrates -- animals that have a backbone or spinal column -- range in size from this tiny new species of frog, as small as 7 millimeters, to the blue whale, measuring 25.8 meters. The new frog was discovered near Amau village in Papua, New Guinea. It captures the title of 'smallest living vertebrate' from a tiny Southeast Asian cyprinid fish that claimed the record in 2006. The adult frog size, determined by averaging the lengths of both males and females, is only 7.7 millimeters. With few exceptions, this and other ultra-small frogs are associated with moist leaf litter in tropical wet forests -- suggesting a unique ecological guild that could not exist under drier circumstances.
Read the rest of the top new species here.
This image of a Box Turtle, uploaded by kingsnake.com user Linda G, is our herp photo of the day!
Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here!
Wednesday, May 22 2013
A just-published map of the world's most endangered species of mammals and amphibians shows that very little of the habitat critical to these species' survival is being protected.
From the BBC:
Amphibians are suffering a "terrifying" rate of extinction say the researchers, making them the most threatened vertebrates in the world. The Mexican salamander or axolotl is being threatened by expanding cities, pollution and invasive fish species which eat their young.
While many of the survival issues facing species highlighted on the map are extremely challenging, sometimes small changes can make a big difference.
(Zoological Society of London Director of Conservation Jonathan) Baillie highlights the example of a small worm like amphibian from Kenya called the Sagalla caecilian.
"It was just losing its habitat because the native trees were taken, so we've started a programme of replanting the native trees and 6,000 have been replanted and the areas where they have their strongholds are now being protected."
"That kind of simple action can ensure that those species can be there hopefully for hundred of years to come."
Read the rest here.
Photo: Mexican salamander/ZSL
This image of an Iguana, uploaded by kingsnake.com user lumenkraft, is our herp photo of the day!
Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here!
Tuesday, May 21 2013
For a little over two years in the 1970s, Patti and I left Florida and spent three years in Massachusetts. During that time the venerable Massachusetts Herpetological Society was active and well, and the monthly meetings were a joy to attend.
At the society meetings I met Tom Tyning, a herpetologist who is now a professor at Berkshire Community College but was at that time a stalwart employee of Massachusetts Audubon. Tom had a wonderful sense of humor, so I thought he was kidding me when he said his herpetological nemesis in MA was the eastern worm snake, Carphophis amoenus amoenus. What I found strange about that statement was that Tom lived at the edge of a sandy, rolling, expanse of land that contained a thriving worm snake population. When I told him this, Tom’s response was something to the effect of a skeptical, “Oh, yeah, sure!”
So, a few days later, on a typically toasty summer afternoon, Tom and I met a couple of hundred feet from his back door, and began our search for fallen tree trunks, discarded newspapers and cardboard, all worm snake cover. Finding such cover was the work of only a minute.
Finding the first few worm snakes took only a few moments longer. Remembering the look of incredulity on Tom’s face has lasted a lifetime.
More photos under the jump.
Continue reading "A 'worm snake,' you say?"
Scientists studying a fossil fond in Iraq in the 1950s were surprised to find it was that of a marine reptile dating back 66 million years, long after the time this group of animals was thought to have become extinct.
From Science Live:
Ichythyosaurs were dolphin-shaped swimming reptiles that gave birth to live young. They lived in the oceans at the same time dinosaurs were tromping around on land. Previously, researchers thought only one group of ichthyosaurs, called ophthalmosaurids, made it out of the Jurassic into the Cretaceous. The newly named fossil, dubbed Malawania anachronus, is a Cretaceous survivor that does not belong to the ophthalmosaurids, however. That means a "ghost lineage" of ichthyosaurs survived alongside the ophthalmosaurids, changing very little over millions of years.
The fossil in question was first found in the 1950s by British petroleum geologists, who noticed the slab being used as a stepping stone on a mule track in Iraq. The geologists rescued the fossil and took it to the United Kingdom, where it stayed unstudied until the 1970s. Because researchers didn't know where in the rock record the fossil had come from, they struggled to determine its age. (Layers of earth build up over time, meaning, in a general sense, the oldest layers will be on the bottom and the more recent layers more toward the surface.)
Read the full story here.
Illustrations: Robert Nicholls (www.paleocreations.com); coloring by C. M. Kosemen (www.cmkosemen.com).
This image of a Southern pine snake, uploaded by kingsnake.com user CrimsonKing, is our herp photo of the day!
Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here!
Monday, May 20 2013
I think every reptile and amphibian keeper has experienced that sinking sensation upon noticing a cage top ajar.
No matter how you've set up your caging, if the animal escapes, your caging or the keeper has failed. If you're an adult, you shrug and take steps to recover the creature. If you're a kid, you know your parents aren't going to be happy with the situation or your attempts to recapture the animal. Unless you find and restore your pet to its housing, this might be the end of your keeping herps for an extended period. If we're talking about an escaped venomous reptile, you (and the animal) need a lot more help than this note can offer.
The big bad about being out of a cage is being away from water. Amphibians are particularly subject to dessication, and it's a terrible way to die. You have maybe 12 hours, if you're lucky, to find your escaped amphibian and restore it to its cage with its fresh water droplets or a bowl of water.
Frogs, salamanders, and newts deal poorly with being away from moisture. Frogs may hop their way into your maybe more humid bathroom, but don't count on it. I never had one make it into the toilet, although I have wished they would. Reptiles are not as subject to desiccation, but the little guys, like anoles and snakes less than 24 inches long, don't have a lot of body bulk for moisture storage.
So, where do they go and how do you find them?
Continue reading "Escaped!"
This image of a Vogel's pit viper, uploaded by kingsnake.com user Vittorio_K, is our herp photo of the day!
Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here!
Check out this video "Logan giving Buddy a bath," submitted by kingsnake.com user spotsowner.
Submit your own reptile & amphibian videos at http://www.kingsnake.com/video/ and you could see them featured here or check out all the videos submitted by other users!
Friday, May 17 2013
Scientists believe the black markings of the West African Gaboon viper may hold the secret to creating materials with a powerful ability to absorb light.
From The Age:
The West African Gaboon viper, one of the largest in Africa and a master of camouflage, has dark spots in the geometrical pattern of its skin that are deep, velvety black and reflect very little light.
Interwoven with white- and brown-coloured scales that are very reflective, this creates a high contrast that renders the snake difficult to spot on the richly-patterned rainforest floor.
A team of German scientists set out to find the secret behind the black spots' ultra darkness, and found the scale surface was made up of tightly-packed, leaf-like microstructures covered in turn with nanometre-sized ridges.
Advertisement
One nanometre is equivalent to a billionth of a metre.
Writing in the Nature journal Scientific Reports, the team theorised that the microstructures and nanostructures, which protrude at slightly different angles, scatter and trap incoming light.
"The structure based velvet black effect could also be potentially transferred to other materials," the scientists wrote.
The complete article is here.
The Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council (PIJAC) has announced the launch of their new, advocacy-based website. The interactive website reflects the organization's mission to provide members and concerned pet owners with a voice in legislative issues affecting pets and pet ownership.
"Our new website is a strong advocacy tool, highlighting issues requiring immediate industry action," said Mike Canning, PIJAC's President and CEO. "Providing quick and easy access to essential information, the new PIJAC website ensures that the industry has a say in its future."
According to Canning, the new design raises awareness and fosters engagement on issues, legislation, and PIJAC activities that affect the industry. New website features include:
- Highlighted action items so all pet professionals can have their voices heard at the legislative level
- A user-friendly legislative map, making it easy to find important legislation in every state
- Enhanced search features making it easy to find the issues that matter most to you and your business
- The PIJAC blog , fostering discussion on issues of importance to the industry
- The new PIJAC program, The Pet Effect, highlighting socially-responsible pet companies that go above and beyond by doing good things for pets in need
- An integrated conference site for the Pet Industry's Top2Top Conference
"Designed by the top advocacy website designer in Washington, D.C., the new PIJAC website will engage our members and the industry to proactively address the issues that affect their bottom line with legislators around the country," Canning said.
To check out the new PIJAC web site please go to, www.pijac.org, and stop by regularly for pet and reptile and amphibian regulatory updates.
|