Monthly Archives: September 2021

Corallus cookii; documenting its life cycle in captivity

A small litter of Corallus cookii, born September 26 at approximately 10:00 p.m., consisted of six live neonates, three small unfertilized ovum and no stillborn.  The neonates weighed 5.51 g to 14.09 g with an average weight of 11.86 g.  The female moved away from the heat source immediately after shedding on 16 September.  She also dropped a large quantity of pre-birth material in the bowel movement.

Litter of six C. cookii born September 26, 2021.

There is a variety of pattern and color between the neonates, though this polymorphism is not as pronounced as it is with C. hortunalus or C. grenadensis.

The iconic rhomboids found on C. cookii.

The female  boa, once finished with parturition,  consumed all three unfertilized ovum-possibly the first time this behavior has been documented in the species.

A total of three litters was produced in 2021:

  • US:  6 live and 3 unfertilized ovum on 26 September.  Smallest neonate weighed 5.51 g and the largest weighed 14 g with an average weight of 11.86 g.
  • US:  5 live, 1 stillborn and 6 unfertilized ovum on 8 October.  Smallest neonate weighed 7.96 g and the largest weighed 9.89 g with an average weight of 8.65 g.
  • US:  5 live, 1 stillborn and 2 unfertilized ovum on 8 October.  Smallest neonate weighed 7.4 g and the largest weighed 12.0 g with an average of 10.18 g.

For more photos and a complete overview of the species, view the C. cookii chapter.

 

Research News – Chilabothrus strigilatus

The Bahama Boa, Chilabothrus strigilatus, was first described in 1862.  However, even almost 160 years after it’s first description, the ecology of this boa still holds many facts that are unknown to science.

The team of Sebastian Hoefer and colleagues were interested in several biological aspects of the snakes occurring on Eleuthera Island.  In their recent study they investigated two snake species occurring on Eleuthera Island and compared prey as well as endoparasite prevalence in the snakes .

Eleuthera Island is one of several islands and cays where Chilabothrus strigilatus occurs. Eleuthera Island has a surface area of 457 km2, maximum elevation of 60 meters above sea level, is 120 km long and, in places, 1 km wide.  Eleuthera Island is located on the eastern part of the Great Bahama Bank.

The study took place from 19 August 2019 to 16 March 2020.  The researchers took the approach to collect road killed specimens of the snakes on Eleuthera and investigate stomach contents as well as parasite load.  This approach is unique and offers detailed insights without sacrificing healthy snakes.

The team investigated across four habitat types and the road was investigated up to four times daily by car or bike.  As a result, the researchers collected 270 road killed snakes representing all four species (232 Bahamian Racers, 31 Bahamian Boas, 6 Northern Bahamas Tropidophis, and 1 Cuban Brown Blindsnake) occurring across Eleuthera.  During this seven-month period, road killed snakes amounted to 35.5 snakes per month or 1.2 a day.  For Bahamian Boas, this translated to 5.2 road kills per month.  Road mortality was previously studied on another Bahamian boa species, Chilabothrus exsul on Abaco Island .  The study concluded that on Abaco island 1.6 Boas are lost per week due to road mortality.  This amounts to a total of 83.2 Boas per year.  The data of Hoefer and colleagues amounts to an annual loss of 62.4 boas.  Thus road mortality and increased traffic poses a serious threat to at least two Bahamian boa species.

The main aim of the study however was the prey selection and parasite load.  The Bahamian Racer Cubophis vudii vudii feeds predominantly on lizards (Anolis sp.).  However, they found the Racers to be opportunistic generalists and in addition to documenting oophagy for the first time in any Bahamian snake, they also described two snakes,  Tropidophis canus barbouri and Typhlops lumbricalis, as prey items of the Racer.

In contrast, the diet of Bahamian Boas consisted exclusively of of anoles and rats.  Juvenile boas fed exclusively on anoles and adults consumed only rats.  This finding confirms an ontogenetic shift in the feeding ecology of the Bahamian Boa.

Regarding the endoparasite load, it was interesting that nematodes were found in most of the racers but none of the boas.  One explanation for this observation is that sample size was different in Boas and Racers but this could also be attributable to differences in activity, movement patterns and foraging behavior between the species.

More information on Bahamas boas can be found here.

Citations
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Corallus grenadensis; documenting its life cycle in captivity

A small litter of seven live, 1 stillborn and six unfertilized ovum was laid on 28 August.  They will now be separated, individually set up and assist fed small anoles for the first 3 or 4 meals until they take anoles on their own.  They undergo the same ontogenetic color change as other boas in the genus-they will look entirely different as adults.  In the EU Johan Versluis had a litter of four live, two stillborn and several unfertilized ovum, born on 22 September.  The babies weighed 4.85g to 6.03g, with an average weight of

Two C. grenadensis born Aug 28, with anolis sagrei as first foods.
7 C. grenadensis born Aug 28, shed from Sep 10-12.
Two C. grenadensis, freshly shed on 10 Sep.

See the Chapter on Corallus grenadensis for more in depth information on the genus and species in particular.