To this date, the second largest Burmese python caught in the Florida Keys. The animal was located in a novel way, it had eaten a Virginia opossum outfitted with a satellite telemetry collar. After a set period of inactivity, the collar would send off signal indicating that the animal was dead. Well this happened, and then the collar would move a few hundred feet, then go back on mortality signal, then move again and so on. After a week of this, we decided to go see what was up with the animal, so we tracked it to the hardwood-mangrove edge underground, odd for a opossum. We set up a grid of camera traps and baited them with cat food and no opossum showed up. A few days later, we tried digging at the point where the signal was strongest, thinking that maybe the collar slipped and after an hour we saw scales! We were able to extract the python that day after quite a fight pulling her from her burrow.
(1) Myself and other CLNWR employees holding the python
(2) First image of the python in the underground cavity
(3) Python being measured
(4) Python's enormous head
(5) Location of the collar (RIP Prairie Dog) in the python's GIT
(6) X-Ray of the collar within the python
Point submitted to EDDMapS and under review, and sent off for necropsy
TL: 383.54cm
SVL: not taken
Mass: 28122.7kg
Sex: Female
Composite of game camera photos of a mother crocodile excavating her hatchlings out of a nest.
An American crocodile chasing a collared study raccoon off a nest site.
Stills of the croc emerging from the water included.
Documenting Threatened Species (DoTS) é um projeto ambicioso que busca documentar e divulgar para o mundo as espécies ameaçadas de extinção no Brasil.
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Veja mais sobre o Projeto DoTS e sobre as espécies ameaçadas de extinção no Brasil em www.projetodots.org ou na conta de Instagram do projeto (https://www.instagram.com/projeto_dots).
Western diamondback, 10 vials crofab.
I was lucky to observe this owl for about 20 minutes. When I first found it, it was actively looking around from a relatively open perch. It flushed to a more concealed perch after I attempted to approach it more closely. I heard it (or another individual) calling the following night in the same general area. (I'm about a year behind on my photos, but I had to expedite this one...)
A truly amazing encounter with one of the world's most enigmatic ungulates. When I first saw this Pygmy Hippo, it was resting on the ground a few meters off the trail, covered with sweat droplets. After about an hour of waiting, it got up and slowly walked through the forest. It did not appear to mind my presence.
Prey observation: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/9939038
The bird was already dead when Angélica found it, but the tarantula had only managed to grab it by the head. I guess it was killed by venom. Highly creepy. I saw this once before, but that time the rapacious arthropod had completely eviscerated the body cavity of a Microcerculus bambla.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/stoufferlsu/9363902166
https://www.flickr.com/photos/stoufferlsu/9363902522
https://www.flickr.com/photos/stoufferlsu/9356715850
https://www.flickr.com/photos/stoufferlsu/9363902696
Unfortunately, a dead one.
Stung someone in her bed and paid the ultimate price.
Reportedly the sting was painful.
Makgadikgadi Saline Grassland (Hyphaene petersiana palm savanna). Under piece of dry wood. Stung 12h17, sharp needle-prick pain. Applied Prep 12h20. 12h38 inflammed, needles-and-pins. 16h37 normal colour, needles-and-pins. 16h53 purple-red around sting, needles-and-pins.
Indian Rock Python
(Python molurus)
Non-venomous
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Some release phone clicks
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Pythons usually are a good climbers as well as a good constrictor, more muscular and more powerful to constrict any of it's prey to death. This beautiful and massive species live's between us and always mistaken to Russell's viper (venomous) and bitten to death. But this is totally non venomous snake, but ya it's bite can be painful but surely no one dies of it. These massive species should be protected very well and people must learn about them more rather than killing any of the snake.
Awarness is the least we can do Before or after rescuing the snake. A massive and strong body and dark brown blotches all over the dorsal side is the best way to differentiate between Russell's viper and python.
Bless the Herp team for finding this I luv u Herp team ❤️❤️❤️
Caught off of a dock from a castnet. I believe it is a juvenile of a species.
Scorpions with two metasomae (tails) are extremely rare, with one estimate I saw as one in every 5,000 specimens. This specimen is approximately 3cm long head to stinger and is being maintained in captivity to study its behavior.
I found this using a black light flashlight with BJ Stacey (@finatic) at the Carrie Nation Trailhead parking lot at Madera Canyon, Arizona.
Read a detailed account of this specimen's discovery and observation updates at the journal post linked below:
http://www.inaturalist.org/journal/jaykeller/7020-rare-arizona-bark-scorpion-with-two-metasomas-tails-and-stingers
Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias) with victim, Eastern Glass Lizard (Ophisaurus ventral) in the family Anguidae, 5/30/2022, The Landings Sparrow Field, Skidaway Island, Savannah, Ga.