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Stiglitz
03-04-17, 12:39 PM
Is this a boomslang (Dispholidus typus)?

Scubadiver59
03-04-17, 12:45 PM
I'm saying, "yes".

Went searching on Google and the snake has the same three plates between the eyes and the four "boxed" plated just forward of those towards the tip of the nose.

Why, did you want one?

TRD
03-04-17, 01:03 PM
Yes that's a boomslang. Cute as hell, but ebola venom glands aside, not easy to keep.

Stiglitz
03-04-17, 01:15 PM
I'm saying, "yes".

Went searching on Google and the snake has the same three plates between the eyes and the four "boxed" plated just forward of those towards the tip of the nose.

Why, did you want one?

Yes that's a boomslang. Cute as hell, but ebola venom glands aside, not easy to keep.


Thanks! No, I do not want one haha. I just like snakes in general and saw this picture so I was wondering. When I look up other images of boomslangs they look much darker than my attached picture. But sometimes color isn't always a good gauge for classification.

TRD
03-04-17, 01:22 PM
[Edit: almost all..] Boomslangs turn black in captivity for some reason (no one really knows why), also they go through a color change when they age. Lookup juvenile boomslang, very pretty :)

REM955
03-04-17, 03:37 PM
[Edit: almost all..] Boomslangs turn black in captivity for some reason (no one really knows why), also they go through a color change when they age. Lookup juvenile boomslang, very pretty :)
Perhaps UV exposure is related to it? Just 2 cents.

TRD
03-04-17, 04:09 PM
Don't know, could be. AFAIK nobody has actually properly researched it. It has either to do with the light, or the diet. I can't really see anything else that could be an underlying cause besides maybe stress of captivity(?). It also doesn't happen to all of the boomslangs in captivity, but most of them under the same conditions, to make matters weird. Could also be that some turn black earlier than others, as I read or heard it happens anywhere between 6 months to 3 years.

FWK
03-04-17, 07:50 PM
It is not Dispholidus typus. The nostrils are located too high, the first upper labial is too square, the rostral scale is incorrectly shaped, and the posterior genials are far to long. A Boomslangs fourth upper labial contacts the third postocular, clearly not the case here.

Everything I can see is morphologically correct for a few species of Leptophis (Parrot Snakes, found in Central and South America), including L. mexicanus and L. nebulosus (we can rule out L. ahaetulla and several others by the presence of a loreal).

Nightflight99
03-12-17, 11:38 PM
FWK is correct--that is definitely not D. typus.

Regarding the observed color-change of members of that genus in captivity: This morphological color change occurs over a period of days or weeks, and is relatively common in captive boomslangs. Of the probably 30+ individuals of this species that I have kept long-term, about 15% or so displayed that color change (always to a near solid black) within the first few years of captivity. Once initiated, that color change consistently progressed until the individuals were fully black.

Although the physiology of this morphological color change has not been properly investigated in this genus, it is likely caused by an increase in melanophores (cells that contain melanosomes, which are organelles that function in the synthesis of melanin). The trigger for this color change is likely to be hormonal in response to some external stress factors (alpha-melanophore-stimulating hormone comes to mind).

http://calphotos.berkeley.edu/imgs/512x768/0000_0000/1106/0803.jpeg
This is one of my former specimens that I kept for many years. It started off being emerald green, and eventually turned nearly completely black.