Archive for 2010

The Gila Monster

Wednesday, November 24th, 2010


The name beaded lizard is a good one, for the non-overlapping scales resemble Indian bead work. The eyes are small and lidded; the ear is externally visible. The tongue is dark and frequently flicked like that of a snake.

The cheek area of these species will appear swollen, as it is here that the poison glands lie. Unlike snakes, the injection mechanism is located in the lower jaw. The poison flows into the lizard’s mouth and seeps into the wound caused by the long teeth. Although the teeth are grooved, they do not effectively conduct the venom flow. Because the actual injection of venom is uncertain, the lizard must hold on to the victim to increase the possibility of injection, instead of simply striking like most poisonous snakes.

While these lizards are generally believed to be slow and lethargic, a Heloderma can turn quite rapidly and secure a good hold on anyone foolish enough to disturb one.

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How Rattlesnakes feed on it’s prey

Sunday, November 21st, 2010


Organs are able to smell in the ordinary way too. This curious organ is not used in food-getting alone, but seems to be put to important social uses such as the forming of hibernating groups and the finding of one sex by another at mating time. Nevertheless, its part in the complex of feeding adaptations of the rattlesnake is evident. It is the only link that the poisonous snake has with the poisoned, doomed but still mobile prey.

Once the rattlesnake has caught up with its now dead or dying victim, it brings to bear the snake-wide ability to fit its jaws over huge packages of food. A four-foot rattler can swallow a full-grown cottontail rabbit. Moreover, it is able to provide itself with cottontails to swallow, something a nonvenomous snake could only rarely do. Nor does the interaction of adaptations end there. Because snake venom contains digestive enzymes, the process of digestion begins as soon as the venom diffuses into the tissues of the prey. This, too, is important in terms of economy and effort. Nonpoisonous snakes, especially the constrictors, which subdue big prey by squeezing them into immobility, must digest without the help of any internal enzyme action in their food. But for the rattlesnake, digestion of the huge bulk proceeds from the inside as well as at the surface, and there is little  doubt that the time involved is greatly shortened – with whatever attendant profit the saving of time might yield to the snake.

The usefulness of venom is not confined to feeding alone. Its potential advantages as a defense mechanism are obviously also powerful. however, this point is not so simple as it might seem at first glance. For while it is clear that poison is a good thing to stay away from, how will another animal know that a snake is poisonous? The question leads to some interesting conclusions.

In feeding activity, of course, there is no conceivable reason why a snake should warn its prey of its venomous intentions. To convert feeding mechanisms to defense, however, either, against attack by snake-eating predators or against the hazard of being accidentally trod upon by heavy animals of any sort, some means of advertisement – a warning system – that will prevent the attack would seem to be required. Violent encounters in nature are generally disadvantageous, even to a poisonous snake, any any device that will reduce their frequency is bound to be a good thing to have. It is evidently for this very reason that coral snakes are usually brilliantly colored and marked, that cobras rise high and spread spectacular hoods, and that the rattlesnake sounds its rattle.

It may never be possible to prove satisfactorily that a rattlesnake evolved its rattle as a safety device, but common sense certainly supports this conclusion. Such mechanisms, however, if they actually work as they seem to, work in a complicated way. They must depend for their effort on a reactive mechanism in the potential enemy – that is to say, a concurrent evolutionary change that might produce in deer, for example, an tendency to shun fancily banded snakes or in coyotes to jump away from the buzz of a rattlesnake’s rattle. This is not hard to imagine, however. There are abundant cases in nature in which two different kinds of animals go through concomitant evolutionary changes that fit them for beneficial contacts with each other or reduce friction between them. In the relationships among living things harmony is at least as important as strife as a means of survival. A crab may cause havoc among the small animals that are its food, but at the same time it tolerantly goes about with a sea anemone on its back, or even makes overt moves to put the anemone there. The stinging cells of the anemone are protection for the crab, and the scraps from the crab’s feeding are eaten by its partner.

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Feet Which Will Go Anywhere

Wednesday, November 17th, 2010


Carrying their heavy shelters around with them, turtles have no need for speed. Their requirement is for powerful legs able to carry the extra weight, and propel them along at a deliberate pace. Most lizards, by comparison scurry through life at a breakneck clip. Generally, they use all four legs in moving about, but several can run on their hind legs, like man. The majority of them rely on swiftness and agility to capture prey or escape enemies. Thus, depending on where they live, they have feet adapted for running across soft sand or over rocks or for climbing trees. Arboreal species have by far the most specialized feet: the chameleons have opposable toes which grasp branches like pincers, the geckos have marvelous clinging pads. The snakes, on the other hand, have learned how to move about without any legs at all.

Pillarlike legs support the weight of the giant Galapagos tortoise, which sometimes weighs 400 pounds or more. While land turtles have developed short thick legs, sometimes with sharp claws for digging, marine turtles have evolved flippers.

Clinging pads on the undersides of a gecko’s toes allow it to scurry easily up trees and smooth walls and even dash across ceilings. The pads, present in most gecko species, consist of a series of plates which are equipped with many tiny hook-like cells.

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Varied Eyes for Varied Lives

Wednesday, November 17th, 2010


Reflecting many different ways of life, the eyes of reptiles show an extremely wide range of adaptations and modifications. For example, the burrowing worm lizard, with little need for any vision at all, has vestigial eyes that appear only as a pair of tiny dots in the skin. But to the chameleon, keen vision is vital for survival, and its eyes are unique in a number of ways. Set on the tips of conical turrets projecting from the sides of the head and protected by eyelids which close to tiny peepholes.

In strong light the vertical pupil of the alligator’s eye closes to a slit, much like the pupil of a cat’s eye. Unlike a cat, however, the alligator’s pupil slit appears colorless in the daylight because the backing of its retina is white. But at night a dramatic change takes place.

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The Business of Eating

Sunday, November 14th, 2010


Though at first glance it may seem silly to use such an example to illustrate the relationship between poisonous snakes and other animals, it is not silly at all. Both the rattlesnake and a bison, say, are potentially dangerous to each other. Neither can get the slightest good out of contact with the other. On the other hand, both can profit immensely by staying cleanly out of one another’s way. What, then, is more logical than that the snake should evolve a warning device, and the potential enemy – the inadvertent trampler – the psychology to react to the warning? Even a carnivore that usually ate snakes – unless it was immune to snake venom – would logically be better off if it had a heritable ability to recognize, or to learn to recognize, harmful snakes. Then it could go about its business of eating harmless snakes without any trouble. The candy-stick coloration of coral snakes would surely entrench any such discriminatory capacity as might be found naturally in a coon or a hawk or any other snake-eating predator. So would the rattlesnake’s hair-raising song.

The idea of a poisonous animal evolving a warning device that will work only if a potential enemy also evolves the sense to react to the warning is hard for some people to accept. I do not know why this should be so. Besides logic, a great store of anecdotal evidence supports its reality. Nearly any mature Florida bird dog, for instance, reacts instantly to the sound of a rattlesnake. While it is hard to be sure what a dog has learned from previous experience or from other dogs, it can in most cases I know about be confidently said that the learning  process did not involve being bitten by a rattlesnake. A pointer I used to hunt with in central Florida, though it had never been bitten by a poisonous snake in its life, showed unmistakable evidence of associating the rattle with a particularly odious situation. In its quartering for quail, if you saw it suddenly jump into the air and you went to the spot to see what had scared it, one of two things was most often there – a coiled diamondback, or a bush of a certain species of Crotalaria, the dry pods of which rattle when disturbed, almost like a rattler’s alarm. Only one of the several species of Crotalaria sounds authentically like a snake, and only that species used to make my dog jump. But the effect of a collision with that was electric, and for all the years of its life the dog rose like a bird when it stirred the fearful noise from a diamondback or from the bush that I think sounded the same to the dog.

That is of course not a scientific observation. It involves a subjective judgment on my part, and the behavior of only one dog. And it in  any case leaves unanswered the question whether the reaction is innate in canines or is learned by associating the sound of the rattle with the bites or aggressive behavior of snakes in general – or is learned from other dogs. That dogs are or Old World, and rattlesnakes of American origin, makes it seem unlikely that the pointer was born genetically able to associate the sound with the snake. On the other hand, the buzzing of rattlesnakes is really just an elaboration of a tendency of many kinds of snakes to vibrate the tail when approached by a potential enemy. The vibration is often soundless, but in dry leaves it makes a little rattling or humming noise. Possibly dog ancestors evolved the capacity to associate such a sound with ill-tempered or dangerous snakes. But the important point is that the rattle of the rattlesnakes makes little sense unless it can be thought of as an agent of advantage to the bearer. And the advantage in not being stepped on by a bison or chopped up by the teeth of a wolf seems pretty clear. That the bison and wolf might go away poisoned and die would be little comfort to the snake. Its profit would come from preventing the encounter from happening.

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Dangerous Lizards

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010


While it is true that any lizard caught by hand is likely to bite, only a very few are likely to cause any real harm. Certain large lizards, those over two feet long, may bite hard enough to draw blood, but only two feet long, may bite hard enough to draw blood, but only two species are venomous out of the numerous species of known lizards. These are the Gila monster and the beaded lizard (Heloderma suspectum and H. horridum, respectively) of the southwestern United States and western Mexico. Both are thick bodied, blunt headed, and stout tailed. All but one subspecies are mottled orange or yellow and black; the other form, from lower Mexico, is solid black. The only venomous lizard in the United States, the Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum) is now protected by law in the few areas it occurs.

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The Black Tegu

Friday, November 5th, 2010


While few teiids are able to run far bipedally, they nevertheless represent some of the fleetest-footed lizards known. The American Cnemidophorus has earned the well deserved name of “racerunner.” Even the large tegus can hustle when necessary. One that I have kept for some time can leap a good six feet, reaching a table top from the floor while a few feet away. I have seen some Tupinambis moving on their hindlimbs with the forebody held off the ground, but they were not running – I think a more descriptive term would be “staggering.” Nevertheless, they were surefooted and well balanced. Almost all teiids will consume both animal and plant matter.

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The Genus of Teiid

Monday, November 1st, 2010


Only one genus of teiid, Cnemidophorus, enters the United States. C.gularis is a common and widespread western species. While little is known of D.paraguyensis, D. guianensis may approach a length of four feet.The tegus of the forests, genus Tupinambis, grow in excess of a yard. These lizards have often earned notorious reputations in their haunts as being hen-house riders. Most teiids, however, are about a foot  or less in length. A great many are but a few inches in length, giving them the nickname of “microteiids.”

Teiids are liable to turn up anywhere. Cnemidophorus is primarily a grasslands or desert creature, while Ameiva is an island-hopper of the Caribbean. Draceana is aquatic, while Bachia and Ophiognomen are semifossorial. At least one species is found in caves. This form, known from Trinidad, is a small enough beast but it may yet have a claim to fame based on a peculiar trait reported for it: it is said to be luminous. While many fishes are bioluminescent, no known terrestrial vertebrate is, except perchance Proctoporus shreivei. To my knowledge no one interested in this peculiar trait has used this particular species for experimental work, only the other similar members of the genus Proctoporus. If we can examine some live specimens of this animal, it may “illuminate” the whole matter once and for all!

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Historic Gaboon Bite

Thursday, October 28th, 2010


The October 2006 all-venomous issue was awesome. I immediately read the gaboon viper article. Good stuff. Not many people know that the late Marlin Perkins was bitten by a gaboon viper in 1928 (according to Reptile Life, vol.1, issue 6). Only one fang penetrated his index finger. At the time, there wasn’t any gaboon viper antivenom in existence. He received four doses of antivenom: two rattlesnake, one cobra and one fer-de-lance. He experienced hemotoxic and neurotoxic symptoms: pain, difficulty breathing, extreme swelling of his arm, bloody urine and loss of consciousness. Mr.Perkins almost died, but pulled through and stayed hospitalized about 25 days.

At the time he was the curator of the St. Louis Zoo’s reptile house and was treating the snake that bit him for parasites. As curator, he surely had a lot of experience and respect for his charges, and he still got bit.

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Guatemalan Beaded Lizards

Sunday, October 24th, 2010


Thanks for running our article, “Endangered Relic,” in the October 2006 issue. We wanted to get the word out about the critical situation this lizard is facing. The good news is that because of the dedication and passion of the many people involved with “Project Heloderma,” there is now a chance to put money directly into the programs that will help save this lizard from extinction.

The International Reptile Conservation Foundation has set up a fund that will provide money to fund education programs within the home range of the Guatemalan beaded lizard, purchase critical habitat and put money toward an in-country captive-breeding facility to headstart and then release offspring back into their native habitat.

There is so much more to this constantly changing situation than I can update you on here, but if you visit the IRCF’s website www.IRCF.org, then you can keep up with the progress we are making. If readers would like to help save this critically endangered lizard, they can also go to www.IRCF.org to make a tax-deductible donation that will truly make a difference. This is one of those rare chances for those of us who share a passion for reptiles to actually make a difference in saving this beautiful lizard species.

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