Reptile & Amphibian News Blog
Keep up with news and features of interest to the reptile and amphibian community on the kingsnake.com blog. We cover breaking stories from the mainstream and scientific media, user-submitted photos and videos, and feature articles and photos by Jeff Barringer, Richard Bartlett, and other herpetologists and herpetoculturists.
Friday, November 30 2012
 Rep. John Fleming, the chair of the House subcommittee on fisheries and wildlife, led a number of his colleagues in the House in dismissing the idea of adding the reticulated python, boa constrictor, Beni anaconda, DeSchauensee's anaconda, and the green anaconda to an existing rule banning the importation and interstate sale of four other species of snake. The committee held a hearing yesterday on the proposed ban, H.R. 511.
From the Tampa Bay Times:
Their staunch opposition greatly diminishes the chances that Congress will approve a bill to broaden the ban on invasive snakes that was proposed by U.S. Rep. Tom Rooney, R-Tequesta, and supported by proponents of Everglades restoration.
Opponents cited evidence that these snakes die in cold weather and cannot move farther north to threaten other parts of the country. They said a nationwide ban on importation and interstate sales would thwart pet owners and pinch the livelihoods of sellers and breeders.
"Florida is handling a Florida problem that only exists in Florida," U.S. Rep. John Fleming, R-La., chairman of the House subcommittee on fisheries and wildlife, told witnesses at a hearing on Thursday.
[...]
A Florida member, U.S. Rep. Steve Southerland, R-Panama City, dismissed the proposed ban as "a solution in search of a problem." He said the bill amounts to an egregious attempt by an overbearing government to rein in helpless small businesses, jeopardizing a $1.4 billion reptile industry.
"I'm dumbfounded," Southerland said. "We got bigger fish to fry here than to target businesses. It's open season on businesses. It's open season on enterprise, on freedom."
To go into force, the bill would have to be approved by the committee, then pass the full House, a Senate committee, and the full Senate, all before Congress closes shop for the year in mid-December.
Read the full story here.
Photo: Tampa Bay Times
Thursday, November 29 2012
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Thu, November 29 2012 at 22:47
Well, I might as well have a kingsnake.com account since I frequent here. My name is Emily, and I consider myself an amateur herpetologist. Although I am younger, I have worked with reptiles since the age of 6 and a half. There I met my best friend and boyfriend, Adam, who will probably do entries as well. Together, we own currently, 28 and a half (we put a deposit down) reptiles. Yes, 28, although I'm sure that isn't unusual here haha. Starting on the first of December, I'll start introducing our reptiles.
Cheers!
-Emily
Wednesday, November 28 2012
Scientific American reports a new species of snake, Imantodes chocoensis, has been identified in the tropical region of Chocó:
Discovered by a group of zoologists led by Omar Torres-Carvajal from the Museo de Zoología QCAZ in Ecuador on 24 April 2007, I. chocoensis was described based on several live individuals and preserved specimens that have been sitting in a number of Ecuadorian and American natural history museums, unidentified since 1994. Also known as the the Chocoan blunt-headed vine snake, it was distinguished from its relatives through an analysis of its DNA, morphological features, and colour patterns. Read more...
It's like an Onion story, but it's real life. Police raided an indoor pot growing facility in Washington State, only to find it being guarded by alligators. Also present: An exotic pole dancer and her pole. The cops put the gators in a tub, and fed them some raw chicken before removing them. No, really. This happened. Read more...
Charles Darwin predicted it, and modern GPS technology proves it: The Galapagos giant tortoise sure gets around:
[S]cientists with the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology and the Charles Darwin Foundation have used GPS technology and 3-D acceleration measurements to find out that the dominant male tortoise will wander up to 10 kilometers into the highlands of the island - but only the fully grown animals migrate, the young tortoises stay in the lowlands.
Why? And why don't they rest during the dry season? It's a Chelonoidis nigra mystery of science.
Charles Darwin anticipated that the giant tortoises wandered large distances. In the cool dry season, the highlands of Santa Cruz are engulfed in fog which allows the vegetation to grow despite the lack of rain. In the lowlands, however, there is no thick layer of clouds and the tortoises' vegetation is not available year round. Adults, which can weigh up to 250 kilograms, spend the dry season in the higher regions at an elevation of 400 meters above sea level. However, since the food is not as nutritious there, they trek back to the lower zones where there is succulent vegetation, as soon as the rainy season begins. Read more...
Tuesday, November 27 2012
 With the hearing on H. R. 511 and the release of a new report questioning the conclusions of the original USGS study this week, yesterday National Public Radio's (NPR) All Things Considered wrote about the issue and interviewed some of the players in the on-going saga of the Burmese python in South Florida.
NRAAC panelist Dr. Elliott Jacobson, National Geographic Society resident herpetologist Dr. Brady Barr, and Dr. Gordon Rodda, author of the original USGS study (now retired) all spoke to NPR. Although most of their statements did not appear to make the interview's final cut, those that did are very brief and very specific.
Jacobson says pythons have trouble eating and digesting food at temperatures below 60 degrees. "The bottom-line conclusion was the number of freezing days in the winter is going to limit the ability of this animal to spread beyond extreme South Florida," he says.
To read the article please check out NPR's website, or listen to the story and interviews here.
 Ivan the Komodo dragon suffers from arthritis. So veterinarians and zookeepers at the Phoenix Zoo recruited the same company that made a prosthetic tail for a Florida dolphin, Hanger Prosthetics and Orthotics, to rig up a prosthetic device to help him get around without pain.
They got to work, and created a custom splint for Ivan at no charge.
The splint has worked to improve Ivan's mobility, as you can see on this video from NBC News here.
Monday, November 26 2012
 When Lonesome George died last June, he was thought to be the last of his kind, the Pinta Island tortoise ( Chelonoidis nigra abingdonii). Now scientists are saying that, given the will, a little effort, and a hundred or 150 years, they can revive the lost subspecies. From ABC News:
Researchers say they may be able to resurrect the Pinta Island subspecies by launching a cross-breeding program with 17 other tortoises found to contain genetic material similar to that of Lonesome George, who died June 24 at the Pacific Ocean archipelago off Ecuador's coast after repeated failed efforts to reproduce.
Edwin Naula, director of the Galapagos National Park, said in a telephone interview on Thursday that the probability is high it can be accomplished.
"It would be the first time that a species was recovered after having been declared extinct," Naula said.
But it won't happen overnight.
"This is going to take about 100 to 150 years," Naula added.
Scientists took DNA samples from 1,600 tortoises on Wolf volcano, and found the Pinta variety in 17, though their overall genetic makeup varied.
Through cross-breeding, "100 percent pure species" can be achieved, said Naula, a biologist.
Read the whole story, and view video, here.
Photo of Lonesome George in 2006 by Mike Weston, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
hello all.
i am very excited to share the process of making a pretty unique terrarium. i have been taking photos of the building stages and they will be posted shortly. i hope you enjoy watching my ideas come to life with me 
this cage is for a Dumeril's Ground Boa i bought as a small baby five years ago named Fleep. (My son named it, lol)
Check it, people!
Continue reading "intense terrarium in the making"
Friday, November 23 2012

If you're like most people, you're still having trouble working off the mashed potatoes and pie from yesterday, and are planning to spend the weekend on the couch watching football, eating leftovers, and enjoying the holiday with family and friends. Instead of fighting the traffic and crowds at the mall to take advantage of this weekend's sales, why not sit back, relax, have another cup of eggnog, and keep yourself warm checking out all the hot holiday deals in kingsnake.com's classifieds?
Casey Lazik is just one on the many longtime kingsnake.com classified vendors offering special deals, like this unusual Female Pastel Clown Ball Python, among others.
With reptile and amphibian vendors from around the world posting ads, kingsnake.com's classified are full of Black Friday and Cyber Monday deals on everything from cages and supplies to reptiles and amphibians -- something for virtually every herper's Christmas list!
Or, if you're a vendor with some hot holiday gift ideas to fill a reptile lover's Christmas stocking, then post your own!
To see all the Black Friday deals in the kingsnake.com classifieds, click here.
To check out the upcoming Cyber Monday deals, click here.
To register for a classified account and post your own holiday deals and offers, click here.
Thursday, November 22 2012
 Thanksgiving stories just don't get much better than this. A pet Sulcata tortoise, who had been missing for months, was re-united with his family in time for the holiday, thanks to the power of social media and the mayor of a nearby Texas town.
From KVUE in Austin:
For the past several months Donna had posted fliers about her missing pet Tortoise, a 40 pound African Sulcata she named John Wayne who escaped from her backyard when he broke through a metal gate.
Little did she know, weeks later and miles away in San Marcos, someone had seen the wandering tortoise and turned him into an Animal Rescue.
San Marcos Mayor Daniel Guerrero who is also a pet lover adopted the tortoise and brought him home.
Through the power of social media, Guerrero had also posted pictures of the new addition to his family.
Different circles of Hays County residents who had seen the fliers and Facebook pictures began to put two and two together.
Three months after he disappeared, “Leonard” as he was named at the Animal Rescue was reunited with his rightful owner Donna.
Read the whole "awwww"-inspiring story here! And Happy Thanksgiving!
Wednesday, November 21 2012
Tired of cute and cuddly animals getting all the attention -- and the conservation efforts, too? So is the Zoological Society of London, which is "trying to bring attention to distinct and endangered animals like the olm, a translucent cave amphibian that can live 100 years, and western long-beaked echidnas, which are mammals that lay eggs.... The society ranks endangered mammals, amphibians and birds based on their evolutionary distinct characteristics in order to raise awareness and to begin conservation programs." Read more...
Can the world's business community turn around devastating habitat destruction and save threatened species? "A quarter of the world's mammals, 13% of birds, 41% of amphibians and 33% of reef-building corals are now at risk of extinction," reports the Guardian in a lengthy, in-depth examination of the concept of "natural capital," and the financial benefits of preserving species and habitats. Read more...
It's the largest release of threatened sea turtles in the Caymans in years... but is it a good thing, or bad? CayCompass.com digs into the roots of the controversy:
Last weekend’s event featured the largest number of turtles released in years, as the breeding farm facility and major tourist attraction in West Bay reported a record number of eggs laid and an increased hatching rate. One by one, and in steady succession, captive-bred farm-raised turtles were off-loaded from a truck that delivered them from the Turtle Farm to the beach adjacent to North Sound Golf Club and then carried to water’s edge by eager participants and placed in the sand to be taken into the warm Western Caribbean Sea by the surf.
“Standing here at the seaside, releasing a fresh group, is the ultimate expression of the Cayman Turtle Farm’s conservation mission,” said Tim Adam, managing director of the Cayman Turtle Farm: Island Wildlife Encounter. “As these baby turtles cross the sand, enter the water and start new lives in the sea – it is an awesome moment that gives us hope for the future. Hope that the wild population will continue to grow and flourish with our help."
[...]
The Turtle Farm hasn’t been without its critics though – especially of late.
The Florida-based Sea Turtle Conservancy and the London-headquartered World Society for the Protection of Animals have urged the Cayman Turtle Farm in recent months to stop farming a species designated as endangered. Critics also say there is limited evidence that the release programme has helped grow turtle populations over the years and suggest releasing farmed turtles could pass on diseases to the species in the wild.
Earlier this year, WSPA released a scathing investigation claiming the Turtle Farm had failed to meet baseline welfare criteria by citing video and photographs purporting to show turtles in overcrowded and dirty tanks, as well as turtles missing fins, sporting various injuries, and even one left blind by congenital defects. The advocacy group maintains that some of the sea turtles have resorted to cannibalism in their enclosures and may pose threats to humans by potentially passing on E coli, salmonella and enterococci to visitors who handle and interact with the creatures at the tourist facility.
Read more...
Photo: Darwin's Frog from WTOP/San Francisco State University.
Monday, November 19 2012
 The most popular kids' show on PBS is going to feature Australian animals and the late Steve Irwin's 14-year-old daughter, Bindi.
From Gather.com:
Curious George is going to Australia for his seventh season premiere, and while he's there, he's going to learn about Australian animals from none other than Bindi Irwin, the daughter of the late Crocodile Hunter, Steve Irwin.
When the monkey and The Man in the Yellow Hat go to Australia, George finds giant footprints in the sand. What can they be? Bindi Irwin helps him find out about that, and about kangaroos, koalas, emus, and more, according to an article at TV By the Numbers.
The episode, titled "Monkey Down Under," starts a whole season of animal-themed shows in which the monkey will learn about all sorts of mammals, birds, insects, and reptiles.
"I was so excited to be a part of Curious George," says Irwin in the article. "He's my favorite monkey, I've loved him my whole life. It's wonderful he could help me teach kids about the beaut bonza animals that live around my home at Australia Zoo."
Read the whole story here.
Photo of Bindi Irwin at the TV Week Logies 2011 by Eva Rinaldi, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.
Thursday, November 15 2012
 The Galapagos Islands, home to some of the world's most unusual and endangered herpetofauna, will be targeted with 22 tons of specially-designed poison baits in an effort to combat the chain's estimated 180 million rats.
The Galapagos, or Archipiélago de Colón, are an archipelago of volcanic islands distributed around the equator in the Pacific Ocean 525 nautical miles west of continental Ecuador, and form an Ecuadorian province, a national park, and a biological marine reserve that are home to the Galápagos land iguana, Conolophus spp., Marine iguana, Amblyrhynchus cristatus, the Galápagos giant tortoise, Chelonoidis nigra, and the Galápagos green turtle, Chelonia mydas agassisi.
From the Associated Press / NBC 6 South Florida:
"It's one of the worst problems the Galapagos have. (Rats) reproduce every three months and eat everything," said Juan Carlos Gonzalez, a specialist with the Nature Conservancy involved in the Phase II eradication operation on Pinzon island and the islet of Plaza Sur."
Geologically young and famed for their vast number of endemic species, which were studied by Charles Darwin during the voyage of the Beagle, many observations and collections made in the Galapagos contributed to the inception of Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection.
A helicopter is to begin dropping nearly 22 tons of specially designed poison bait on an island today, launching the second phase of a campaign to clear out the invasive Norway and black rats, introduced by whalers and buccaneers beginning in the 17th century. The rats feed on the eggs and hatchlings of the islands' native species. To read more, see the complete article here.
(Gallery photo posted by Ivory Tortoise)
Wednesday, November 14 2012
 A heartwarming story about the endangered Kemp's Ridley sea turtle -- with an international twist.
From ABC News:
They named her Flip — a Kemp’s Ridley sea turtle found last December, stranded on the coast of Holland. She was injured and stunned by the cold.
But the scientists and animal lovers who rescued her took advantage of a key fact about Kemps’ Ridleys — that while they’re endangered, they are also among the world’s great long-distance travelers. Specialists nursed her back to health, and released her into the water today — off the coast of south Texas.
“We couldn’t have asked for it to go any better,” said Iain Scouller, the general manager of Sea Life Aquarium Grapevine, based near Dallas-Fort Worth. “We set her loose at high tide, and off she went.”
Read the story -- and watch video of the release -- here!
Tuesday, November 13 2012
Hey all. At the expo last weekend I got a Pygmy chameleon. The breeder claims it as a male but I have seen websites showing pictures like him as a male and female. Any help? Figured there might be someone here that owns and breeds them. I want to know so I can get another soon if all goes well. I'll try to get a picture on here soon.
P.S. It is R. Temporalis
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