Madagascarophis

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Madagascarophis
Malagasy Cat-eyed Snake, Madagascarophis colubrinus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Serpentes
Family: Colubridae
Genus: Madagascarophis
Mertens, 1952

Madagascarophis is a genus of small, mildly venomous colubrid snakes native to the island of Madagascar. They are commonly referred to as Malagasy cat-eyed snakes. Four species are in the genus.

Species

  • M. citrinus (Boettger, 1877)
  • M. colubrinus
    • M. c. colubrinus (Schlegel, 1837)
    • M. c. insularis (Domergue, 1987)
    • M. c. occidentalis (Domergue, 1987)
    • M. c. pastoriensis (Domergue, 1987)
    • M. c. septentrionalis (Domergue, 1987)
  • M. meridionalis (Domergue, 1987)
  • M. ocellatus (Domergue, 1987)

Description

Madagascarophis species are small snakes, rarely exceeding 100 cm in adult size. They are highly variable in color, greys, browns, yellows, greens, and oranges with darker colored blotches. They have large eyes with vertical pupils.

Behavior

Malagasy cat-eyed snakes are found in a wide variety of habitats throughout the island of Madagascar, from montane regions to rain forest. Primarily nocturnal and terrestrial, they are capable of climbing and are strong swimmers. They feed on a variety of prey, including chameleons and rodents. Their venom is mild and often not powerful enough to subdue their chosen prey items, so they also employ constriction as necessary.

In captivity

M. colubrinus and M. ocellatus are frequently imported for the exotic pet trade, and for educational research. The Ophidian Research Colony of the University of Texas at Tyler is known to keep a breeding group of M. colubrinus. The eggs take 83 days to hatch as young snakes at 27°C.

References

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