Puerto Rican boa
Chilabothrus inornatus, until recently known as Epicrates inornatus, is a large species of boa; this snake is only found on the island of Puerto Rico. It is locally known most simply by the common names of culebrón, which basically means 'big snake', or more specifically as the boa puertorriqueña. For publications in English either the names Puerto Rican boa or yellow tree boa have been promoted, although it is not yellow, nor does it live in trees: it is a terrestrial snake with a dark brown coloration. It grows to 1.9 m (6.2 ft) in length. It feeds on small mammals such as rodents and bats, birds and sometimes anole lizards. Like all boas, it is viviparous (bearing live young) and kills its prey using constriction, squeezing its victims to death.
Puerto Rican boa | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Order: | Squamata |
Suborder: | Serpentes |
Family: | Boidae |
Genus: | Chilabothrus |
Species: | C. inornatus |
Binomial name | |
Chilabothrus inornatus | |
Synonyms[3][4] | |
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Taxonomy
It is extremely similar to the Jamaican species Epicrates subflavus which was seen as the same species for some fifty years until it was split from this species in 1901 by Leonhard Hess Stejneger.[5]
The taxon Piesigaster boettgeri was described from Mindanao, the Philippines, by the Spaniard es:Víctor López Seoane in 1881, but was identified as a synonym of this species by Stejneger. Seoane's brother was an officer in the Spanish Navy and thus the localities of the group of specimens Seoane had obtained doubtlessly got confused during their passage to Spain.[5]
Although it has been known under the name E. inornatus for over a century, having been moved to the genus Epicrates (which had been created in 1830 by Johann Georg Wagler) by the Belgian zoologist George Albert Boulenger in 1893 when cataloguing the specimens in the Natural History Museum, London, a number of authors decided to it move to Chilabothrus inornatus in 2013. It had first been moved to Chilabothrus inornatus from the genus Boa in 1844 by either the French herpetologists André Marie Constant Duméril and Gabriel Bibron,[3] or the Italian snake expert Giorgio Jan,[5] only a year after it had been described in that genus by the Dane Johannes Theodor Reinhardt in 1843. Reinhardt had three snakes of this species to study for his description, these are the syntypes and are stored in Copenhagen. They were collected by a certain Dr. Ravn from Puerto Rico.[3][6] It is often still known as Epicrates inornatus in many publications.
Etymology
The generic epithet epicrates is derived from the Ancient Greek word ἐπικρατής, meaning 'powerful', and the specific epithet inornatus is from the Latin negation of ornatus, meaning 'adorned', thus the boa is 'unadorned'.[5]
Description
A characteristic of this species are the irregular parietal scales. It can grow to some 1.9 m (6.2 ft), with 261 to 271 ventral scales and 67 to 75 caudal scales, according to Stejneger in 1904, who only knew of at least twelve specimens at the time. The colours of the three live specimens he knew of were variable; two he describes as "bistre" (deep, dark, grayish brown), the other as "chestnut" with a darker colour near the tail, the first had a darker ventral surface, the second he describes as "slate" coloured, and the last had a lighter slate-brown underside with the ventral scales having paler edges. The first was patterned with seventy to eighty indistinct dusky cross bars consisting of a row of spots, these cross bars increasing in width to the end of the snake; in the second these patterns were much more distinct, with the crossbars having pale centres but being outlined in blackish colour, the lateral spots being so aligned as to form a blackish line in the front third of its body, but in the last snake there was little evidence of patterning with only a few scattered and obscure darkish spots on its sides. The iris he describes as "silvery gray clouded with dusky".[5]
It grows to 1.8–2.7 m (5.9–8.9 ft) in total length.
Similar species
Puerto Rico has very few snakes for a Caribbean island of its size, besides this species there are Alsophis portoricensis and Arrhyton exiguum and a number of very small blindsnakes of the genus Typhlops, and this is the largest species by far. The only other species of Epicrates in the area is Epicrates monensis. In that species the supraocular scales are about one half as broad as the frontal scales, whereas in this species the supraoculars are about one third as broad as the frontal scales.[5]
Distribution
The Puerto Rican boa is endemic to the island of Puerto Rico.[1][3][7]
Ecology
Habitat
It is found in wooded and rocky places in the foothills.[5] It is more common in the northwest and in the karst regions[1] which are found along the northern coast of the island.
Diet
The boa feeds by seizing the prey in its jaws, wrapping several coils around the victim, and then constricting until the prey has suffocated. The prey is then swallowed head first. The feeding habits of the very young are unknown. However, locals claim they eat small lizards, other small vertebrates and some insects.
This species is a sit-and-wait predator as opposed to an active hunter of prey. It is a nocturnal, terrestrial hunter which is not found often in trees. The dissections of 72 snakes from the West Indies show that while young boas of the genus Epicrates feed primarily on anoles, mature boas (with the exception of Epicrates gracilis) feed for some 60% on mammals combined, which distinguishes them ecologically from the other three genera of snakes on the island. Birds constitute some 10% of the diet. The rest of the prey items are composed of Anolis lizards and a very small amount of frogs. They also prey on much larger-sized prey than the other snakes. Half of the mammals are non-native species of mice (Mus) and rats (Rattus), it is suspected that the original prey was other small mammals such as Nesophontes, Brotomys and Isolobodon before the introduction of these species. Bats constitute the other half. Newborn snakes may possibly feed on geckos. It is thought that this species in particular feeds less on anoles and more on birds, rodents and bats.[8]
Since the karst region where the Puerto Rican boa lives usually has many caves, the boa has the opportunity to feed on bats -a phenomenon which was previously seen in other Epicrates species. Observations in the 1980s revealed that boas capture the bats in flight by hanging at the opening of the cave, waiting until bats fly out of it. They then grab a bat with their jaws before killing it via constriction.[9][10]
Reproduction
Pregnant females give birth to about 23-26 live boas.
Conservation
Historic records, some dating back to the 18th century, indicate that during the first few centuries of Spanish colonization in Puerto Rico the boa was relatively abundant, and oil produced from the snake's fat was utilized extensively as an export (see snake oil). Impacts to the boa resulting from the oil trade were undoubtedly heightened by a concurrent reduction of habitat. Deforestation of the island began during this period and continued until, by the early 20th century, very little natural forest remained. Predation by the mongoose, introduced into Puerto Rico in the 19th century, has been postulated as a further cause for the boa's present status, but there is no direct evidence to support this idea.
In 1904 Stejneger mentions that during his time the snake was rather rare, he himself, as well as a number of other collecting parties in the newly acquired territory, were unable to see one during their expeditions on the island, although a trail of one was seen. Other collecting parties were able to collect five specimens in 1900 and in those first few years the island became a possession of the United States, and bring these to the mainland, almost doubling the specimens known at the time. In the previous century only six other specimens had been secured, these were all in Europe -one in Milan (used by Jan), one in Paris (studied by Duméril and Bibron from Bayamon, there was also a second specimen from Haiti, but this one is now thought to have been misidentified), two or more somewhere in Spain (those of Seoane supposedly from Mindanao), and the three original syntypes used by Reinhardt in Copenhagen.[5]
After the invasion and annexation of the territory by the United States a few years before Stejneger and numerous other Americans were able to collect on the island, there was a subsequent economic decline due of the loss of traditional agricultural markets for sugar, and much of the forests have regrown on the island. There is an indication that the boa has recovered somewhat in recent years, although not to the degree that protective measures can be dropped. To prevent its extinction, a few conservation efforts have been attempted, including a conservation area for it in Bosque Estatal San Patricio in Guaynabo.
References
- https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/7821/12853042
- "Chilabothrus inornatus (Reinhardt, 1843)". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
- Chilabothrus inornatus at the Reptarium.cz Reptile Database. Accessed 7 October 2015.
- Boulenger GA. 1893. Catalogue of the Snakes in the British Museum (Natural History). Volume I., Containing the Families ... Boidæ ... London: Trustees of the British Museum (Natural History). (Taylor and Francis, printers). xiii + 448 pp. + Plates I-XXVIII. (Epicrates inornatus, pp. 97-98).
- Stejneger, Leonhard Hess (1904). Herpetology of Porto Rico (in United States National Museum Annual report of 1902). Washington, District of Columbia: United States National Museum. p. 688–692. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.11835.
- Reynolds, R. G.; Niemiller, M. L.; Hedges, Stephen Blair; Dornburg, A.; Puente-Rolón, A.; Revell, L. J. (2013). "Molecular phylogeny and historical biogeography of West Indian boid snakes (Chilabothrus)". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 68 (3): 461–470. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2013.04.029. PMID 23669009.
- Schwartz A, Thomas R. 1975. A Check-list of West Indian Amphibians and Reptiles. Carnegie Museum of Natural History Special Publication No. 1. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Carnegie Museum of Natural History. 216 pp. (Epicrates inornatus, p. 185).
- Henderson, Robert W.; Crother, Brian I. (January 1989). "Biogeographic patterns of predation in West Indian snakes". In Woods, Charles A. (ed.). Biogeography of the West Indies: Past, present, and future. Gainesville: Sandhill Crane Press. pp. 479–518. doi:10.1016/0169-5347(90)90113-R. ISBN 1 877743 03 8.
- Rodriguez, Gustavo A.; Reagan, Douglas P. (1984). "Bat predation by the Puerto Rican boa, Epicrates inornatus". Copeia. 1984 (1): 219–220. doi:10.2307/1445060. JSTOR 1445060.
- Rodriguez-Duran, Armando (1996). "Foraging ecology of the Puerto Rican boa (Epicrates inornatus): bat predation, carrion feeding, and piracy". Journal of Herpetology. 30 (4): 533–536. doi:10.2307/1565698. JSTOR 1565698.
Further reading
- Reinhardt JT. 1843. "Beskrivelse af Nogle nye Slangearter ". Danske Vidensk. Selsk. Afhandl. 10: 233-279. (Boa inornata, pp. 253–257, plate i, figures 21-23)