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.
Tuesday, October 15 2013
Regeneration of lost organs or body parts is the stuff of science fiction, but it's also science fact. At the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, researchers are studying the many species that can regenerate cells in their body, and hoping to find information humans can benefit from, too.
From a Las Vegas Sun interview with UNLV researcher Kelly Tseng:
Most people don’t know that tadpoles can regenerate their tails — and very quickly. It usually takes seven to 14 days. Planaria, which are flatworms, can be cut into pieces, each of which will regenerate. Zebrafish can regenerate their heart, even if on-third of it is cut away. Antlers of a moose can grow two centimeters a day, which is the fastest rate of organ regeneration. Salamanders are basically the champion of regeneration. They can grow back a limb, a tail, their retina, even part of their brain.
It’s really amazing, all these animals with abilities we would like to have.
The full story is here.
Photo: Las Vegas Sun
This image of a Radiated Tortoise, uploaded by kingsnake.com user zovick, is our herp photo of the day!
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Monday, October 14 2013
This image of a Ball Python, uploaded by kingsnake.com user m_mcmurtray, is our herp photo of the day!
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Check out this video "Snake Hunting Colorado," submitted by kingsnake.com user jfarah.
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, October 11 2013
If you live in Washington state and think you could provide a good home for an abandoned python, the veterinarians at Washington State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine want to hear from you.
From KGW News:
Washington State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine captured and hospitalized the abandoned 11-foot-long reticulated python Tuesday night. The snake is believed to have been abandoned by renters in a house near Colfax according to WSU officials.
This is the second time in a month that law enforcement has asked for assistance from WSU to catch a large snake, according to College of Veterinary Medicine officials.
WSU workers said the snake was slightly undernourished but weighed 22 pounds. It suffered moderate burns before its capture according to staff at WSU. They said the cold-blooded snake curled around a heater at the rental property.
[...]
Anyone interested in donating to the snake’s care or joining a registry for selection as its potential new owner can contact the WSU Veterinary Teaching Hospital at 509-335-0711.
Read the full story here.
This image of a Cross-Barred Snake, uploaded by kingsnake.com user MVH4, is our herp photo of the day!
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Thursday, October 10 2013
Meet the cocoa frog, just one of dozens of new species discovered in Suriname.
From NBC News:
"Suriname is one of the last places where an opportunity still exists to conserve massive tracts of untouched forest and pristine rivers where biodiversity is thriving," Trond Larsen, director of Conservation International's Rapid Assessment Program, said in a news release about the trip.
The three-week survey in Suriname's upper Palumeu River watershed, conducted last year and led by Conservation International, cataloged 1,378 species — including 60 species that are potentially new to science.
Read the article and see photos of all the new species here.
Photo: NBC News
Stopped by the little turtle pool, as I do each morning, and found a hatchling turtle floating in a patch of sunshine. I took a hurried look around on the surrounding land and found a a hole about an inch in diameter and 3 inches deep.
Inside were four eggshells. There was no question about the identification, The only species housed there had been Rhinoclemmys pulcherrima incisa, the Guatemalan (painted) wood turtle. The adults were now in a large pen for the summer rainy season.
This turtle, if you’re not familiar with it has a brown, rough surfaced, carapace that may be quite flat, rather highly domed, or somewhere between these extremes. The carapace is a warm brown (color is sometimes hard to determine because these turtles are adept and persistent at kicking dirt upon themselves) and the yellow plastron bears a large, dark central blotch that is often weakly edged with pale rose.
But it is the facial neck and forelimb patterns that give rise to the common name of painted. The brown to grayish face and anterior neck bears a complex of thin, but easily visible, bright red stripes. The red striping is also present on the anterior surface of the forelimbs but there the striping is broader and even more pronounced. All in all, these are pretty turtles and at least as importantly, they are hardy and easily cared for.
It seemed apparent that there were no more hatchlings in the pond, so I began a methodical search of the surrounding area. Looking amidst and around the grasses disclosed one additional hatchling. The next day, following a hard rain, I found the third, and on the third day I found the fourth baby. I had now found a hatchling for each of the empty eggshells.
The hatchlings (all brought indoors) are quite like miniatures of the adults in appearance, but have less strongly textured carapaces and rosier plastrons.
I wonder if a second nesting occurred this summer. Another month and I should know.
More photos under the jump...
Continue reading "One, two, three, four baby turtles!"
This image of a Vieillard's Chameleon Gecko, uploaded by kingsnake.com user geckovillage, is our herp photo of the day!
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Wednesday, October 9 2013
If you ever needed proof that no good deed goes unpunished, just read this story of a Florida man bitten by a rattlesnake while helping a turtle get out of traffic.
From the Sun-Sentinel:
The 24-year-old man, whose name was not immediately released, and a friend were driving on Interstate 75 in west Broward County when they saw a turtle crossing the highway.
At a point west of the interchange, where I-75 meets Interstate 595, they pulled over. The man got out, grabbed the turtle and carried it to a grassy area on the side of the highway.
"When he reached down to put the turtle in the grass, that's when the snake bit him," said Capt. Jeff Fobb, of the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Venom Response Team.
Read the full story here.
Photo: Miami-Dade Fire Rescue
This image of a First Look, uploaded by kingsnake.com user SouthernHerp, is our herp photo of the day!
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Tuesday, October 8 2013
The little creek puddled out a bit as it neared the road and then was constricted narrowly into a metal culvert that passed beneath the road. Upstream a bit, the creek narrowed and gurgled merrily downhill around and over some boulders. Still further upstream, the boulders were larger and the creek was even more precipitous. Beyond that I couldn’t see from my current vantage point, but I’d soon know the scope of things.
To either side of the creekbed grassy meadows interspersed with small escarpments and many boulders sloped far upward, and at their summits were stands of pines. We started at the bottom and began working our way upward. Tough walking. So we moved to the grassy slopes and slipped and tripped our way to the top (hoping all the while for no encounter with a hidden timber rattler), reaccessed the stream, and began our walk downward. This was a little easier.
We were at this creek in the hopes of finding a seal salamander, Desmognathus montanus, exhibiting piebaldism. Kenny had been told by a researcher that there was a high incidence of this aberrancy at this locale. In fact, his initial information was that all of the seal salamanders in this creek were piebald.
We walked slowly along the creek bed, turning and replacing an occasional likely-looking, water-swept rock along the way. Going was slow, but with the first few salamanders found we determined that definitely not all of the salamanders were piebald. In fact, as the day wore on and one after the other the salamanders proved normal, we began to wonder whether we’d actually find one that was piebald.
We did. In fact we found three, one adult and two juveniles. We extend a big thank you to Kenny’s sources!
More photos under the jump...
Continue reading "A seal (salamander) by any other color..."
For 50 years, the Pinocchio anole, Anolis proboscis, was believed to be extinct. Now researchers have confirmed the species still exists in the forests of Ecuador.
From Mother Nature News:
After searching for the long-nosed animal for three years, a team of photographers and researchers found the lizard recently in a stretch of pristine cloud forest in the northwest part of the country, said Alejandro Arteaga, a co-founder of the educational and ecotourism company Tropical Herping, which conducted the search for the lizard.
Also called the Pinocchio anole (an anole is a type of lizard), the animal is named after a certain dishonest wooden puppet and was first discovered in 1953, Arteaga said. But wasn't seen between the 1960s and 2005, when an ornithologist saw one crossing a road in the same remote area in northwest Ecuador. This is only the third time scientists have spotted it since 2005, Arteaga added.
Read the rest here.
Photo: Alejandro Arteaga/Tropical Herping
This image of a Wood Turtle, uploaded by kingsnake.com user kensopher, is our herp photo of the day!
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Monday, October 7 2013
Check out this video "Het albino X Sunglow Litter," submitted by kingsnake.com user robertmcphee.
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This image of a Wild Utah Garter Snake, uploaded by kingsnake.com user Utahn, is our herp photo of the day!
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Friday, October 4 2013
The little car bumped and thumped as we raced along a nearly dark forest road in North Carolina. Our destination was one of those many that appeared only a mile or so away on the map, but when you factored in the twists, turns, ups, and downs, bumps and thumps, it proved to be a good 30 minutes from our starting point.
Salamander was the name, and finding them was the game. The little salamanders that we sought were the red-legged and the red-cheeked variants of the Ocoee salamander, Desmognathus ocoee. These are harmless mimics, if you will, of the distasteful Jordan’s salamander complex phases.
We finally sped into a parking area overlooking a deserted campground. And in the middle of the campground was a ring of sizable rocks and a dozen or more well charred log sections all topsy turvy atop a bed of ashes. I spent some time flipping logs and rocks in the surrounding woodlands. Kenny headed straight for the campsite. By the time I got to that area he had already found Red-legged Salamanders, Plethodon shermani, Blue Ridge Two-lined Salamanders, Eurycea wilderae, and several of the desired color variants of the Ocoee Salamander, Desmognathus ocoee.
But for us the best was yet to come. Beneath one log we found an Ocoee Salamander that rather than either/or was gaudily clad in red not only on the cheeks but on the legs as well. This was a variant that neither of us had been aware of.
Success, and now the long drive back to hustle and bustle of the peopled world.
More photos under the jump...
Continue reading "Ocoee Salamander: Red cheeks, red legs!"
When we talk about "snake handling" here on kingsnake.com, we're not talking about religion. But today on National Public Radio, they are.
From NPR:
Worshiping with snakes dates back more than 100 years, but today, the major Pentecostal denominations denounce the practice.
There are an estimated 125 snake-handling churches scattered across Alabama, Georgia, the Carolinas and Appalachia, where the tradition is strongest. Snakes in church are against the law everywhere but West Virginia, though in most states it's a misdemeanor offense the authorities don't bother with.
[...]
There are the five signs often practiced in snake handling churches, including the sipping of poison such as strychnine or lye as a test of their faith.
[Pastor Jamie] Coots has been bitten nine times by venomous snakes. Each time he refused medical attention. Half of his right middle finger is gone as a result of a fang from a yellow rattler. In 1995, a woman who was bit in his church refused to go to the hospital; she died on Coots' couch while they prayed over her.
Such is the conviction of his belief that Coots has agreed not to call EMS if [his son] Little Cody is bitten. "He has been bit five times by cottonmouths, and he has already told me, 'Dad, I'll never go to a doctor,' " says his father.
Read and listen to the rest of the story here.
Photo: NPR
This image of a Ball Python, uploaded by kingsnake.com user smann, is our herp photo of the day!
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Thursday, October 3 2013
Veterinary Practice News is reporting that reptile and exotic animal vet, author, and longtime kingsnake.com community member Dr. Kevin Wright passed away unexpectedly Sept. 26 after a brief illness. He was 50 years old.
Dr. Wright was a prolific writer on reptile and amphibian subjects, contributing over 300 articles to Reptiles magazine and other publications over the years, and was an original board member with the Association of Reptilian and Amphibian Veterinarians.
A 1988 graduate of the University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine, Dr. Wright was co-author of the 2001 manual "Amphibian Medicine and Captive Husbandry." His career included work at zoos in Philadelphia, Miami, Phoenix, and Washington, D.C., and he owned Wright Bird and Exotic Pet House Calls, a mobile practice based in Mesa, Ariz.
He is survived by his wife, Marlene.
For more information, read the article on the Veterinary Practice News website.
This image of an East African Gaboon, uploaded by kingsnake.com user reptilelocators, is our herp photo of the day!
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Wednesday, October 2 2013
Cancer: It's a word no one wants to hear. Especially when it happens to a family member.
As many members of the East Texas Herpetelogical Society (ETHS) in Houston know, a longtime member of their family and the herp community, Nathan Wells, has been fighting a battle with cancer since first diagnosed in the summer of 2012.
Nathan kept friends and family up to date with his battle throughout the year, posting updates of his fight from hospital bed describing his treatments and procedures, until he beat his cancer.
But as any cop will tell you, you may beat the ticket, but you never beat the ride.
Even with medical insurance, a long cancer fight is an expensive battle, one that continues long after the illness has passed, and Nathan and his family have been left with a pile of medical bills.
His family at ETHS pitched in during their 23rd Annual Conference and Breeders Expo over the weekend, and held a fundraiser with a goal of raising $10,000 for Nathan's medical expenses. They continue to take donations on his behalf.
Nathan's story, a story that can happen to any one of us, is detailed on the ETHS website this month. To read more about one herper's incredible fight against cancer and for details on how to donate to his medical expense fund, click here.
This image of a Frog, uploaded by kingsnake.com user davemangham, is our herp photo of the day!
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Tuesday, October 1 2013
Nine baby ocellate mountain vipers ( Vipera wagneri) are helping their species stay off the brink of extinction, thanks to the efforts of the St. Louis Zoo.
From Scientific American:
In 2009, with populations down at least 80 percent and a new dam on the Aras River threatening to destroy a large portion of the snake’s habitat, the International Union for Conservation of Nature listed the ocellate mountain viper as “critically endangered.”
[...] The Saint Louis Zoo coordinates a Species Survival Plan (based on the programs created by the American Association of Zoos and Aquariums) for the ocellate mountain viper, which includes a cooperative breeding program among several zoos. There aren’t many zoos that hold these snakes, though. Saint Louis is one of only three in the U.S. with the species in their collections, and they have the majority: Including the nine snakes born on August 16, Saint Louis Zoo has 23 of the 28 ocellate mountain vipers in the U.S.
The snakes are considered critically endangered in the wild. Read the full story here.
Photo: Mark Wanner, Saint Louis Zoo
If you take the time to look back into the nomenclatural history of the northern leopard frog, Rana pipiens, you will note at least two names that were long ago hidden in synonomy.
Both were of northern populations, Minnesota and Wisconsin to be specific and I found both to be just different enough from a typical northern leopard frog to be of interest.
One variant, Rana pipiens burnsi by name, was nearly devoid of the oval leopard spots that typify the species.
Continue reading "A 'leopard' by any other name"
This image of Anacondas, uploaded by kingsnake.com user mjf, is our herp photo of the day!
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