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.
Monday, September 30 2013
Check out this video "Egyptian Uromastyx," submitted by kingsnake.com user stingray.
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 a Crested Gecko, uploaded by kingsnake.com user LSU_Tigress, is our herp photo of the day!
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Friday, September 27 2013
This image of a Chameleon, uploaded by kingsnake.com user ToucanJungle, is our herp photo of the day!
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We're always happy to see the media grasping that "venomous" and "poisonous" don't mean the same thing. For your Friday viewing pleasure, stop by io9.com and check out some of the world's coolest venomous crittters!
Photo from the kingsnake.com photo gallery: BakerReptiles
Thursday, September 26 2013
The little dugout angled out of the river and approached our dock. In it sat a villager holding something at bay with one paddle while deftly maneuvering with another.
Mike Pingleton was closest, and even before the boat touched shore, he was excited. And well he should have been, for unlike one of the more common snakes the villagers usually bring us, on the bottom of the boat was a two foot long creature clad in scales of tan that were arranged in annuli.
The villager lifted the creature gently on a paddle, and Mike soon had it in hand. About the diameter of a thumb, we were all soon staring intently at a fairly common but seldom seen, legless, burrower, a Giant Worm lizard (more correctly a Giant Amphisbaenid), Amphisbaena alba.
Besides lacking limbs, this intriguing creature lacks functional eyes. The scalation is arranged in prominent rings that give it the superficial appearance of a gigantic earthworm.
To many of us, the appearance of this very specialized lizard-like animal was the high point of the trip.
More photos under the jump...
Continue reading "A Giant Worm Lizard!"
Before the age of the dinosaurs, a mass extinction event occurred that destroyed 70 percent of all terrestrial vertebrate species and almost all aquatic species. It took as long as 10 million years for life on earth to recover from what is now known as the end-Permian extinction event.
After that recovery but before the rise of the dinosaurs, the ancestors of modern lizards and snakes emerged.
From the University College London:
Two new fossil jaws discovered in Vellberg, Germany provide the first direct evidence that the ancestors of lizards, snakes and tuatara (known collectively as lepidosaurs), were alive during the Middle Triassic period – around 240 million years ago.
The new fossil finds predate all other lepidosaur records by 12 million years. The findings are published in BMC Evolutionary Biology.
The international team of scientists who dated the fossil jaws have provided evidence that lepidosaurs first appeared after the end-Permian mass extinction event, a period when fauna began to recover and thrive in the more humid climate.
Lead author Dr Marc Jones, who conducted the research at UCL, explained: "The Middle Triassic represents a time when the world has recovered from the Permian mass extinction but is not yet dominated by dinosaurs. This is also when familiar groups, such as frogs and lizards, may have first appeared."
The small teeth and lightly built jaws suggest that the extinct animal preyed on small insects. The new fossils are most closely related to the tuatara, a lizard-like reptile.
[...]
The new fossil jaws can improve molecular dating estimates of when reptiles began to diversify into snakes, lizard and tuatara, and when the first modern lizards inhabited the earth. Previous estimates have varied over a range of 64 million years and the team are keen to help narrow this down.
"Some previous estimates based on molecular data suggested that lizards first evolved 290 million years ago," said second author Cajsa Lisa Anderson, University of Gothenburg. "To a palaeontologist this seems way too old and our revised molecular analysis agrees with the fossils."
Revised molecular dating in light of this new fossil find now suggests lizards began to diversify into most of the modern groups we recognise today, such as geckos and skinks, less than 150 million years ago in the Cretaceous period, following continental fragmentation.
Read more here.
Photos: Marc Jones/UCL
This image of a Gray Banded Kingsnake, uploaded by kingsnake.com user jcherry, is our herp photo of the day!
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Wednesday, September 25 2013
Some programs to help troubled young people have seen improvement in school and interpersonal relationships after the children and teens have worked with dogs or horses. Now snakes and other "misunderstood animals" can be added to that list.
From Trails Carolina:
Studies have shown that animal assisted therapy and relationships with animal companions in general provide an improvement in physical, emotional and psychological well-being. Trails advanced this research by building a curriculum where students interact and engage with misunderstood animals and parallel this experience to their own.
“We learned as children to hate snakes, turtles, possums and the like and we’ve been taught that they’re bad,” says Steve O’Neil, Trails’ Ecology Expert. “Most of our students come in with a lot of fear and within minutes they’re holding a snake. Overcoming their fear and misconceptions about these animals also helps our students see themselves in a different light.”
Similar to these animals, the troubled youth of Trails are facing their own misunderstandings of the world and how people perceive them. By gaining a better understanding of the ecological value of these misunderstood animals students gain a better understanding of their own value and how their behaviors and actions are often misunderstood. This curriculum helps students build confidence in themselves and better understand how to communicate with others.
Read more here.
By
Wed, September 25 2013 at 05:52
I have struggled with hatching Gray-banded Kingsnake ( Lampropeltis alterna) eggs for the past 34 years. Just when I feel I have it figured out, I have major catastrophes occur such as babies dying full-term in the shell, severely kinked babies, and babies not absorbing their yolk sacs.
I have tried vermiculite, paper towels, sand/peat moss mixes, and peat moss to varying degrees of success. Lately, I have been using peat moss employing the following strategy.
First, I use peat moss soaked in spring water for about fifteen minutes. I then squeeze out as much water as possible and “fluff” up the moss. I place the eggs either on top or in the middle of my peat moss in a half-gallon plastic jar with a tiny hole at the top. Then I place the jar in my incubator set at approximately 78 °F (25 °C).
I find the results to be similar if I have the eggs on top or sandwiched in the middle of the moss. Using this strategy, I hatch out MOST of my fertile L. alterna eggs; I still have some die full term in the shell or with severe kinks; however, most of my babies come out fine.
Feel free to describe your strategies to successful egg incubation!
Figure 1. The buried approach. All seven of these eggs hatched with no problems:
More photos under the jump...
Continue reading "How to get snake eggs to hatch"
This image of a Ball Python, uploaded by kingsnake.com user draybar, is our herp photo of the day!
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Tuesday, September 24 2013
Noted California herpetologist and author of many popular reptile and amphibian field guides used by amateur and professional herpetologists alike, Robert C. Stebbins passed away yesterday at the age of 98.
Born on March 31, 1915, in Chico, California, the first of seven children, his work with reptiles and amphibans on the west coast has been described as "what the Oxford English Dictionary is to lexicographers" and includes such noted works as;
- Amphibians of Western North America (UC Press, 1951)
- Amphibians and Reptiles of Western North America (McGraw-Hill Press, 1954)
- Reptiles and Amphibians of the San Francisco Bay Region (UC Press, 1960)
- A Field Guide to Western Reptiles and Amphibians (Houghton-Mifflin Co., 1966)
- Amphibians and Reptiles of California (UC Press, 1972)
- A Field Guide to Western Reptiles and Amphibians, 2nd edition (Houghton-Mifflin Co., 1985)
- A Field Guide to Western Reptiles and Amphibians, 3rd edition (Houghton-Mifflin Co., 2003)
- Field Guide to Amphibians and Reptiles of California, revised edition (w/ Samuel M. McGinnis; UC Press, 2012)
Incredibly, even though retired and well in his 90s, Robert Stebbins was still working, releasing an updated Field Guide to Amphibians and Reptiles of California just last year.
To read more about Robert Stebbins and his work, click here for more from the (bio)accumulation web site .
How could this be? Was I delusional? We were treading a narrow trail through old secondary rainforest in Amazonian Peru, not in southeast Asia, the bailiwick of the green water dragon.
We were out late. It was after midnight. And there, sleeping soundly on a supple limb at face height, was a foot long green lizard that looked an awful lot like the dragon with which I was so familiar. Big angular head, somewhat stocky body and tapering tail. Vertebral crest, sturdy legs.
As I photographed the sleeping lizard I was doing an extensive memory search and finally, as a default, came up with the hoplocercine genus Enyalioides, the forest dragons. And following through on the thought process led me eventually to the Amazon Forest Dragon, E. laticeps.
This was exciting, for I had never seen one in the wild. I could now count this as a lifer on my ever growing life-list.
More photos under the jump...
Continue reading "A Green Water Dragon?"
A teeny tiny little Mandarin rat snake grounded a Qantas Boeing 747 in Sydney last weekend.
From ABC News:
Staff found the 20-centimeter (8-inch) Mandarin Rat Snake in the passenger cabin near the door late Sunday before passengers were due to board the flight bound for Tokyo from Sydney International Airport, Qantas said in a statement.
Australia's flagship airline said passengers were given hotel rooms overnight and left Sydney on a replacement plane Monday morning. Qantas said the original jet would be fumigated before returning to service in case there were other snakes on board.
The snake was taken by quarantine officials for analysis.
The Agriculture Department said the snake, a species that grows to an average 1.2 meters (4 feet), had been euthanized, "as exotic reptiles of this kind can harbor pests and diseases not present in Australia."
Read the full story here.
Photo: kingsnake.com user mattroconnor
This image of a Asian Vine Snake, uploaded by kingsnake.com user apophis, is our herp photo of the day!
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Monday, September 23 2013
Check out this video "Anoles in My Garden," submitted by kingsnake.com user clintg.
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This image of a Radiated Tortoise hatching, uploaded by kingsnake.com user marcp, is our herp photo of the day!
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Friday, September 20 2013
One by one we have found and photographed over 130 species of herps on Madre Selva Biological Preserve. The Preserve is located on the banks of Peru’s Rio Orosa, a few dozen miles upriver from its confluence with the mighty Rio Amazonas.
But there is one species, a hallmark of Amazonian reptiles, that continues to elude our wandering gazes. This is the Basin form of the Emerald Tree Boa, Corallus batesi.
We are elated when this magnificent snake is found one river up or down Amazon from the preserve and we then renew our efforts to find it. The intensive searches, by day, by night, in fair weather and foul, have probably led to our finding of more than a dozen other elusive species, and for this we are grateful. But it would be so very nice to be able to add an emerald to the ever-burgeoning list.
During January of 2014 (the normally rainy Amazon summer—it’s in the southern hemisphere) we will be trying again. Wish us luck. Or come on down and join us!
More photos under the jump...
Continue reading "Emerald tree boas: Green and invisible"
It's not often a veterinarian who writes about pets for a mainstream newspaper devotes an entire column not just to a pet snake, but a species that's not kept as a pet all that often. But Modesto, Calif., veterinarian Dr. Jeff Kahler did just that in a recent piece in the Modesto Bee, where he recounted the story of a wart snake brought to his practice because his eyes had clouded over.
From the article:
Bando is a 3-year-old, 6 1/2-foot snake - and not just any kind of snake. He is a wart snake or sometimes called elephant trunk snake. Bando's caretaker, Randy, has had Bando for two years, having purchased him from a California reptile dealer.
He is housed in an aquarium that is temperature-controlled and aquatic. Bando spends almost all of his time in the water, including feeding time. His diet consists of goldfish and he is feed once a week. Randy reports that Bando has had no problems in the past two years but recently appears to have developed an issue with his eyes.
Over the past few weeks, Bando's eyes have become more and more opaque. They are now to the point where Randy suspects Bando cannot see.
Initially Randy thought Bando's eyes were clouding over as they normally do right before he sheds his skin but even after a shed occurred, the opacity in Bando's eyes remained. Randy has yet to find a veterinarian to examine Bando so he took to the internet and eventually got me involved.
To understand what might be going on with Bando's eyes, it helps to understand a bit about the natural history of his species. For you aficionados, wart snakes belong to the genus Acrochordus, which includes three species of snakes. I suspect Bando is a Java wart snake because of his large size.
These snakes are native to parts of southeast Asia and spend most of their time in water. Their diet consists of aquatic life --- especially fish --- and they have a rough scale pattern, which aids in gripping fish as they coil around them when eating. In my clinical experience, these are very rare snakes in captivity. I personally have only worked with them in zoo collections.
There are many possibilities that could cause Bando's eye issues. But it is my suspicion that Bando's eye problem is directly related to his captive environment and, more specifically, the water he is kept in.
Click here to find out what's wrong with Bando!
Photo: Smacdonald at en.wikipedia, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
This image of a Giant Leaftail Gecko, uploaded by kingsnake.com user Geckos_R_Me, is our herp photo of the day!
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Thursday, September 19 2013
Four new species of legless lizards have been added to the one previously known member of the group Anniella, reports the journal Breviora.
From the LA Times:
Anniella are pretty small animals, about as thick as a pencil and rarely more than 8 inches long. They spend their lives wiggling beneath loose, sandy soil, snacking on bugs and larvae.
They don't move fast or far, and the researchers say they may spend their whole lives in an area about the size of your dining room table.
Aside from that, scientists still don't know much about them.
"They are one of the most poorly studied reptiles in California," [Cal State Fullerton researcher James] Parham said. "Because they live under the sand, you can't see what they are doing, and you can't even do a mark-and-recapture because you can't reliably capture these things."
Parham and his coauthor Theodore Papenfuss, a herpetologist with the UC Berkeley Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, have been scouring the state for legless lizards for 15 years. When they began their research, only one type of legless lizard was known to live in California.
One of the four newly identified species of Anniella, the Southern California legless lizard, was found under some dead leaves in dunes at the west end of Los Angeles International Airport.
The Bakersfield legless lizard was found in three vacant lots in downtown Bakersfield.
The southern Sierra legless lizard was spotted in three dry canyons on the edge of the Mojave Desert, and the Temblor legless lizard was found in the oil fields around the city of Taft, on the southwestern edge of the San Joaquin Valley.
To find these lizards, the scientists scattered 2,000 pieces of cardboard and plywood throughout the state to create moist, cool areas, which appeal to the lizards. Then they returned months later to see if any of the lizards had shown up.
Read the full story here.
This image of a Tegu, uploaded by kingsnake.com user MrSickle, is our herp photo of the day!
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Wednesday, September 18 2013
The Eastern Pacific hawksbill turtle ( Eretmochelys imbricata), thought to be all but extinct, is making a comeback to Central America's Gulf of Fonseca. How did it happen? No one knows.
From Fox News Latino:
The Eastern Pacific Hawksbill sea turtle was considered critically endangered until about seven years ago, with many scientists considering the species extinct.
Scientists have now discovered that the turtles are once again arriving in the Gulf of Fonseca, a large body of water in western Central America that is shared by Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua.
"We know the Eastern Pacific Hawksbill turtle is arriving in the Gulf of Fonseca, but we do not know why, nor do we know if its life cycle has changed - if a large number stay in the gulf - or if it is due to food, nesting or even why they live here," [Honduran Natural Resources and Environment Secretariat director of biodiversity Rafael Amaro] Garcia said.
Climate change is one possible cause of the resurgence of the sea turtle population. Read more here.
Photo: An Indo-Pacific hawksbill sea turtle.
This image of an Arrow Frog, uploaded by kingsnake.com user Slaytonp, is our herp photo of the day!
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Tuesday, September 17 2013
Fungal threats to honeybees and bats have been in the news lately, but they're not the only species at risk from these human-spread diseases. Snakes and amphibians, too, are facing catastrophic effects from these emerging pathogens.
From the Washington Post:
They are fungi, and they arrived in the United States from overseas with an assist from humans — through travel and trade. They prefer cold conditions and kill with precision, so efficiently that they’re creating a crisis in the wild.
The death toll on amphibians, bats and snakes from fungi represents “potential extinction events,” said [Dr. Jeremy] Coleman, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife research biologist who coordinates the government’s response to the bat-killing infection known as white-nose syndrome. It’s so large, he said, that it can’t be measured “as far as numbers of dead organisms,” and is “decimating populations as we know them.”
Read more here.
Photo: USFWS
When I saw my first living Western two-lined forest pit vipers, Bothriopsis bilineatus smaragdinus, in the wilds of Amazonian Peru, it was more or less because of a fortuitous rest, During that rest, a clutch of four neonates had been found coiled quietly on the broad leaves of a trailside shrub.
Patti and I were leading a herp photography tour, and earlier that day one of the participants had asked me what snake I had yet failed to see was highest on my list of "want to sees." My answer to her had been that it was this arboreal pit viper, a taxon that I had searched for on many other occasions but had failed to find.
In fact, I had seen this black-peppered green subspecies only two times before. The first time had been in the cages of a northeastern reptile dealer. The second time had been an adult that had been killed by a Peruvian villager. Therefore I knew that the snake occurred in the forests that now surrounded us. But time and again Patti and I had walked various trails and failed to see the creature.
Continue reading "Tree vipers in the night"
This image of a Sand Boa, uploaded by kingsnake.com user AlexNevgloski, is our herp photo of the day!
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Monday, September 16 2013
This image of a Hognose Snake, uploaded by kingsnake.com user AdamTheOdd, is our herp photo of the day!
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Check out this video "Female Nosy Faly Delivery," submitted by kingsnake.com user 1Sun.
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, September 13 2013
In what has to be the dreamiest, most romantic reptile-related news story, ever, scientists report that Amazonian butterlifes drink the tears of turtles.
From LiveScience.com:
The sight of butterflies flocking onto the heads of yellow-spotted river turtles in the western Amazon rain forest is not uncommon, at least if one is able to sneak up on the skittish reptiles. But the reason why butterflies congregate onto the turtles may be stranger than you think: to drink their tears.
The butterflies are likely attracted to the turtles' tears because the liquid drops contain salt, specifically sodium, an important mineral that is scant in the western Amazon, said Phil Torres, a scientist who does much of his research at the Tambopata Research Center in Peru and is associated with Rice University.
Unlike butterflies, turtles get plenty of sodium through their largely carnivorous diet.
Read the rest here.
Photo: Jeff Cremer / Perunature.com
This image of a Red Eared Slider, uploaded by kingsnake.com user scripta_elegans, is our herp photo of the day!
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