View Full Version : what kind of boa do I have.. Cant tell from chart
redtailboas213
11-04-13, 09:16 PM
okay I have a 6 foot boa constricter.. doNT know if its a redtail, columbian or just a plain boa.. can you help indentify him/her
http://i42.tinypic.com/x2mb6v.jpg
DeadlyDesires
11-04-13, 09:24 PM
looks like a normal bci colombian boa to me.. can you post some pictures of the tail and a full body shot?
poison123
11-04-13, 09:41 PM
No such thing as a "plain boa".
I to would agree with colombian boa.
redtailboas213
11-04-13, 10:10 PM
okay so is there different kind of "comon boas" or is it just one kind..??
I was told I had a "columbian red tail boa".. iss there even such thing??
Mikoh4792
11-04-13, 10:18 PM
Not many people have actual colombian boa constrictor constrictors. Many colombian boas in captivity in the US are actually colombian boa constrictor imperator, aka the common boa.
Real red-tailed boas are boa constrictor constrictor which include the different locals like suriname, guyana, peru...etc
KORBIN5895
11-05-13, 06:09 AM
Mikoh, what the heck is a Colombian bcc?
Mikoh4792
11-05-13, 07:49 AM
They are the bcc that come from Colombia. The bcc and bci are separated by either a mountain range or river(i forgot, I will have to go back and find it) and there is a point of integration between the two.
EDIT:
From the book The Complete Boa Constrictor:
page 166
"There are two boa subspecies that are indigenous to Colombia. Boa c. imperator and Boa c. constrictor. Boa c. imperator is found west of the Andes and Boa c. constrictor is found to the east. In this chapter we will discuss the more commonly exported boa, Boa c. imperator."
"One theory regarding the large size of the mainland Colombian Boa c. imperator relates to the fact that the ranges of Boa c. constrictor(the true red-tailed boas found east of the Andes) and Boa c. imperator overlap in the northern portion of Colombia. The Andes mountains are too high for the boas to pass over and have always been a natural barrier between these two subspecies. However, the Andes Mountain Range is lower in altitude in the middle of Colombia and it is here that the two subspecies co-mingle"
KORBIN5895
11-05-13, 09:25 AM
Hears someone say that once but they never backed it up. Very cool.
thinkbig317
11-05-13, 10:03 AM
Nice info Mikoh!
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