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(kingsnake.com) - Friday, Apr 26, 2024
Happy Rattlesnake Friday! This certainly is not a rattlesnake, but it is a beautiful venomous creature. What a great close up of a Gaboon Viper, uploaded by kingsnake.com user magnum26 is full of sassy and potentially life-saving venom! Be sure to tell them you liked it here! As always on Friday, we celebrate all of our venomous reptiles for their contribution to the world. Upload your own reptile and amphibian photos at gallery.kingsnake.com, and you could see them featured here! | Sponsored Link advertise here - click for info
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News Briefs Reintroduced Siamese Crocodile exhibits first time nesting
(Cindy Steinle) - Tuesday, Apr 16, 2024
The authors note: “While collecting eggs for incubation in May 2022, we were able to identify a unique series of notched tail scutes on a female C. siamensis as she aggressively defended a nest. They have managed to reduce the mortality with their headstart program by an amazing 90%! To read the paper and full story, click here. |
More News Briefs
- Reintroduced Siamese Crocodile exhibits first time nest... - Can a virus save Frogs from fungal disease? - Tinley Reflections: An open letter from Mom - Autopsy report for Gila Monster bite released - Got Milk? Caecilians might! - Woman finds rattlesnake in car - Green Anaconda Species split - Destination Arkansas: The Most Snake Infested Lakes - Pet Gila Monster bite fatal for Colorado owner - Costa Rican Serpentarium works to save lives - ARIZONA: USARK URGENT ACTION ALERT - Flashback - The Alterna Files - Research attempts to stop killing of Brown Snakes - Rat snake survives eating car part - Zoo Atlanta hatches endangered beaded lizards - Polar vortex, what are your back up plans? - News Wrap: Snakes gone wild in Australia - Venomous snake may help with high blood pressure - New Species of Salamander discovered in Costa Rica - Farewell B.H.B. - Hundreds of Sea Turtles released from poachers - Conservation efforts have unintended effects - Gecko Fossil name honors Grandmother - ACTION ALERT FLORIDA: Florida moves to include all spec... - Golfer deals with combating pythons - Cobra causes stir at Immigration office - Garter Snakes form friendships in a female oriented com... - New species of lizard discovered in Vietnam - First ever zoo-reared Hellbender reproduces in the wild - New Frog species discovered - More... |
Featured Contributors
Asian Giant Pond Turtle, Heosemys grandis
(Richard Bartlett) - Monday, Apr 29, 2024
This is a prettily colored albino Giant Asian Pond Turtle The times? They have changed. And they have changed BIG time. Herp species that used to cost $10 or $20 are now priced in the hundreds or even the thousands of dollars if they are available at all. Why, you may ask have prices changes so radically? Two major reasons are species population control by origin countries and a stricter adherence to International Wildlife Laws by our US Fish and Wildlife Svc. Compare these hurdles to yesteryear when the collecting, importation and exportation of many (if not most) herp species were basically unregulated. An example would be one of my very favorite Asian turtle species, the Giant Asian Pond Turtle, Heosemys grandis Before the turn of the century Thailand (Bangkok was a MAJOR collecting, clearance and shipping center) the sales and shipping of this turtle species were basically unregulated. Young examples, meaning those in the 4 to 6 inch shell length range, arrived at USA dealers on almost every shipment. The price for those of normal color was in the $50, range (albinos, of course, were more expensive). If you want a normal color morph today (2024) start saving . At this writing, no young ones seem available but several 15+ inch long adults are being offered at $950 each. Capable of living in water or on land the Giant Asian Pond Turtle may be found along bodies of water such as lakes, ponds, rivers, streams, and canals. It is omnivorous and finds food in both aquatic and terrestrial environments. Their diet consists of worms, larvae, insects, snails, carrion, and aquatic and terrestrial plants. Hungry captives do not hesitate to dine on turtle companions. Similar to other species of turtles, the giant Asian pond turtle has developed adaptations and different techniques for capturing prey in both types of environments. A bit more about this impressive species: This turtle species attains a full size of 17” straight measure. In nature it inhabits waterways as diverse as rivers and streams to swamps, marshes, and rice paddies. The dark carapace may be brown or black, the yellow plastron is heavily streaked with radiating dark lines. The jaws are powerful and in closing I’ll simply say “although they seldom go out of their way to bite, watch where you place your fingers”. Continue reading "Asian Giant Pond Turtle, Heosemys grandis" |
More Featured Articles
- Asian Giant Pond Turtle, Heosemys grandis - What’s Green, Slender, and Has Keeled Belly Scales? - Hispaniolan Cat-eyed or Hog-nosed Snake, revisited - Spotted Red Trope - Racerlets and the Lesser Racer of Cuba - Skinklike Forest Lizards - Flashback - The Alterna Files - Bark Anoles - Anoles - Saba and Its Anole - Inyo Mountain Salamander, - CANEBRAKE! A Big One! - The Giant Worm Lizard (Amphisbaenid) - The Collared Forest Gecko - The Bridled Forest Gecko - The Brown Water Snake - Amazon Tree Boas - Okeetee Memories - Pyxie Frogs - Blotched Blue-tongued Skinks - Gila Monsters - Holy Thursday Massacre: The Killing Fields of Florida - Corns of a Different Color - Yellow-bellies and Redears - Eastern Indigo Snake - GIla Monsters saving Diabetics - Iberian Snub-nosed Vipers, Vipera latastei ssp. - European Leopard Rat snake - Is a Canebrake Really a Canebrake? My Thoughts. - Meet the Timber Rattlesnake, northern style - More... Banner Pool $30.00year - click for info |
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