Latest update March 29th, 2024 12:59 AM
Jul 03, 2011 Features / Columnists, Interesting Creatures in Guyana
Corallus caninus is a non-venomous boa species found in the rainforests of South America. No subspecies are currently recognized.
Description
Adults grow to about 6 feet (1.8 m) in length. They have highly developed front teeth that are likely proportionately larger than those of any other non-venomous snake.
The colour pattern typically consists of an emerald green ground color with a white irregular interrupted zigzag stripe or so-called ‘lightning bolts’ down the back and a yellow belly. The bright colouration and markings are very distinctive among South American snakes. Juveniles vary in colour between various shades of light and dark orange or brick-red before ontogenetic colouration sets in and the animals turn emerald green (after 9–12 months of age).
This also occurs in Morelia viridis, a species in which hatchlings and juveniles may also be canary yellow or brick-red. As opposed to popular belief, yellow juveniles (as in the green tree python) do not occur in the emerald tree boa. The name recently suggested for this morphological variant, but not yet widely accepted, is Corallus batesii.
Specimens from the Amazon River basin tend to grow the largest, are much more docile than their Northern relatives and attain lengths of 7–9 feet (2.1–2.7 m), while the overall average size is closer to 6 feet (1.8 m). Those from the southern end of their range in Peru tend to be darker in colour. Amazon Basin specimens generally have an uninterrupted white dorsal line, whereas the white markings in the Northern Shield specimens are quite variable.
The snout scales in Amazon Basin specimens are also much smaller than in their Northern, Southern and Western counterparts found, for example, in Suriname, Venezuela, Bolivia, and French Guiana. Hybrid forms between the Northern Shield Corallus caninus and the Amazon Basin form are also known to exist.
Corallus caninus appears very similar to the green tree python, Morelia viridis, from Southeast Asia and Australia. Only very distantly related, this is an example of convergent evolution. Physical differences include the head scalation and the location of the heat pits around the mouth.
Geographic range
Found in South America in the Amazon Basin region of Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, northern Bolivia, Brazil, and from Venezuela to Suriname and the Guianas within the so-called Northern Shield. The type locality given is “Americae.” The ‘Basin’ variant’, as the name suggests, is only found along the basin of the Amazon River, in southern Suriname, southern Guyana, southern Venezuela to Colombia, Peru and Brazil and in the surrounding jungles of the Amazon River.
Behaviour
A strictly nocturnal and arboreal species, it spends its days in a characteristic coil over a tree branch with its head perched at the center. At night, it will remain coiled on its branch, but extends its head downwards, curled as if about to strike. It will hold still in this position, waiting for prey to approach directly below. Prey is grasped with the long frontal teeth, pulled in and constricted to asphyxiation.
Feeding
The diet consists primarily of small mammals, but they have been known to eat some smaller bird species as well as lizards and frogs. Due to the extremely slow metabolism of this species, it feeds much less often than ground dwelling species and meals may be several months apart.
Previously, it had been thought that the primary diet consisted of birds. However, studies of the stomach contents of this species indicate that the majority of its diet consists of small mammals. Juvenile and neonates have also been known to feed on small lizards and frogs, particularly glass frogs.
It catches the prey with a high speed.
Reproduction
The species is ovoviviparous, with females producing an average of between 6 and 14 young at a time, sometimes even more. Litters exceeding these numbers are extremely rare.
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