Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Snake Facts - 2
Snake’s scales are made up of something called Keratin, which is the same thing that our fingernails are made from.

Mother Pythons will coil themselves around their eggs and make their bodies shiver in order to heat herself up and keep her eggs warm until they hatch.

The biggest snake is the Reticulated Python. It can grow up to 10.05 meters or 33 feet long!

The thickest snake is the Anaconda. The biggest one found measured 111 centimeters or 44 inches around. That's huge!

The Thread snake is the smallest snake. It is only about 10 centimeters (4 inches long) and the size of a toothpick.

Vine snakes are remarkable because they appear to have binocular vision.

Many Zookeepers believe that Cobras are faster learners than other snakes. They are able to tell the difference between their trainer and strangers.

The ancient Greek god, Asklepios, was thought to be a healer of the sick and injured. People would take an offering to the temple and wait for Asklepios to, either come to them in their dreams or send his servants, the snake, to help them. One touch of the forked tongue was all they thought they needed to heal them. The healing snake was the Aesculapian snake. The Romans would bring this snake into their temples rather than the Greek healers. To this day the Aesculapian snake forms part of the symbols representing physicians and veterinarians.

This would be funny to watch! The Hognose, Grass snake and the Spitting Cobra will fake death when feeling threatened. They flip into their backs, open their mouths, and let their tongue flop out. And they will let out some smelly stuff from their anal gland. Nobody would want to eat it after that!

A reticulated python, named Colossus, was the largest snake that ever lived in a zoo. She lived at the Pittsburgh Zoo in Pennsylvania. Clifford Pope, the author of a book entitled “The Giant Snakes” reported that she was 22 feet long when she was captured in what is now Thailand in 1949. Eight years later she grew to 8.69 m (28 ½ feet) long. Her body was 69 cm (37 ½ inches) around and her weight was around 145 kg (320 pounds).
posted by Reptile Fellow @ 12:24 AM   0 comments


Friday, June 27, 2008
Video of a Snake Shedding its Skin
posted by Reptile Fellow @ 12:24 AM   0 comments


Sunday, June 22, 2008
Snake Facts - 1
There are 2700 species and subspecies of SNAKES in the world. As a group, they lack legs, hearing, and movable eyelids. Having evolved from lizards, some snakes still possess skeletal remnants of legs. Snakes have a large number of vertebrae (180 to 435), most of which have ribs attached. There are 4 families of snakes: Boidae (boas and pythons), Colubridae (racers, garter snakes, rat snakes and many others), Elapidae (cobras, mambas, and their relatives), Viperidae (rattlesnakes and other vipers).

Snakes have no movable eyelids or external ears.

Snakes are the world's most effective natural control on rodent population.

Most snakes can swallow prey that is 3 times or more their own body diameter.

Less than one-third of the world's snake species are venomous and less than 10% are dangerously venomous. However, in Australia 65% of all snake species are venomous, in the United States only 10% of the snake species are venomous.

You can't tell the age of a rattlesnake by counting its rattles because it gets a new rattle each time it sheds its skin, which can occur 1 to 6 times per year.

The world's longest snake (by reliable documentation) is the reticulated python, with a maximum length of, perhaps, 30 feet.

Common Cobra venom is not on the list of top 10 venoms yet it is still 40 times more toxic than cyanide.

The venom of the Australian Brown Snake is so powerful only 1/14,000th of an ounce is enough to kill a human.
posted by Reptile Fellow @ 12:23 AM   0 comments


Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Lizard Facts
There are almost 6000 species of reptiles in five families. The largest group of reptiles is the LIZARDS with about 3000 species. Most lizards are 4-legged, but a few have only 2 legs and others are legless. Lizards live in diverse environments and are the most geographically widespread of the reptiles. In size, lizards can range from 2 inches to 10 feet in length. Only two species, Gila Monsters and Beaded Lizards, are venomous.

Many Central Americans love the taste of the common iguana so much that they call it "gallina del palo," or "chicken of the tree."

Many lizards can change colors in seconds to match their surroundings.

The scaly skin of a lizard is made of keatin, the same substance that forms human fingernails.

Lizards have crude third eyes on top of their heads that senses whether it's day or night.

Texas horned lizards can squirt blood from their eyes. Some can hit enemies up to 10 feet (3 m) away.

Basilisks have amazing running skills. When threatened, these lizards take off on their hind legs, eventually building up enough speed to run on water.

A flying dragon avoids danger by opening two large, winglike flaps of skin and gliding from tree to tree.

The lizard steers with its tail. Marine iguanas can dive as deep as 50 feet (15 m) underwater to feed on algae.

The Gecko lizard is the only reptile with a true voice.

Some lizards' tongues are longer than their entire bodies.
posted by Reptile Fellow @ 12:23 AM   0 comments


Friday, June 13, 2008
Northern Ringneck Snake
posted by Reptile Fellow @ 12:23 AM   0 comments


Sunday, June 8, 2008
Reptile Facts - 3
There are about 250 species of turtles, 25 species of crocodilians,
3000 species of lizards, 130 species of amphibians, and 5,500 species of snakes.

Reptiles are cold-blooded or as scientists say ectothermic.

Most reptiles are carnivores, and eat whole prey or insects. Some insects though are herbivores and eat green plants.

Dinosaurs were not reptiles, in fact the they were thought to have evolved into birds. Many reptiles were thought to be warm-blooded the opposite of reptiles.

The longest snake was a reticulated python that was 32 feet and 9 and 1/2 inches.

The largest crocodile is 23 feet long.

The smallest species of crocodile is the dwarf caiman, the males rarely exceed 5 feet.

The snake responsible for the most deaths to humans is the carpet viper.

The worlds fastest lizard is the spiny-tailed iguana at 21.7 mph.

The smallest lizard in the world is the gecko of the Virgin Islands, at 0.70 inches.

The world most venomous snake is probable the species of sea snake called Hydrophis belcheri

The largest lizard is the komodo dragon of the Indonesian islands.
posted by Reptile Fellow @ 12:22 AM   0 comments


Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Rattlesnake Ready to Strike!

Photo Source: National Geographic Photo Gallery
Photographer: Bruce Dale
posted by Reptile Fellow @ 12:21 AM   0 comments




 
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