Home

Animals

Reptiles

Boa

Boa is the common name for about 50 species of snakes closely related to pythons. The family includes the largest of all snakes, the water-dwelling anaconda of South America. All boas are nonpoisonous and kill by constriction. Unlike the pythons, they bear live young.

Snakes can detect heat, or infrared, rays through specialized groups of nerve endings scattered through the skin. Most boas are active at night and have pits along their lips that are also sensitive to the heat of prey. Boas are usually handsomely marked and often iridescent, the most striking being the rainbow boa.

 The species best known as "boa" is the boa constrictor, which ranges from Mexico to Argentina and the West Indies. These snakes grow up to 12 feet long, but an 18.5-foot specimen is on record. In the pet trade this snake is often called a "red-tail" boa because of its reddish brown markings on its tail.

Boas are primitive snakes with anatomical features that reflect their lizard ancestry, such as bony vestiges of hind limbs that terminate in external claws, and the presence of two functional lungs instead of the one found in most snakes.

HABITAT

Red-tail boas blend in very easily with fallen leaves on the ground. Although they can easily climb trees in the under story and canopy of the rainforests, and do so to search for food; but they return to the forest floor to rest where they're very well camouflaged.

Snakes in general, lack external ear openings, eardrums, and middle-ear cavities. The small sound-conducting bone is still present. In other reptiles this bone is positioned between the inner ear and the eardrum, but in snakes it is situated between the inner ear and the jaw hinge. When the snake's head is on the ground, vibrations are picked up by the lower jaw and skull and are transmitted by bone conduction to the inner ear. Snakes, therefore, can readily detect earth borne sounds. The lack of eardrums and middle-ear cavities implies that snakes cannot hear airborne sounds. Certain experiments, however, have shown that the snake's inner ear does respond to low-frequency airborne vibrations.

The snake's skin is primarily a protective structure, guarding it against physical injury and the loss of body moisture. The scales covering the skin are mainly derived from a folding of the upper layer of the skin. Because the scales do not increase in size or because the outer layer becomes worn, or because of reasons not yet understood, a snake must periodically shed its old skin and replace it with a new and larger one. In molting, the old, upper layer of skin becomes loose and separated from a newer layer developing beneath it. The snake loosens the skin around its lips pushing it back, and crawls out of the old skin turning it inside out. Frequency of shedding varies according to the growth rate of the snake.

DIET

Some snakes simply suffocate their captured prey by squeezing them with their jaws, but a snake's long, muscular body is ideally suited for applying pressure on a prey animal. Constriction does not crush the prey animal but rather prevents it from breathing and suffocates it.

As an adaptation to allow the swallowing of large animals whole, the snake's skull is very flexible. Elastic ligaments are all that unite the two halves of the lower jaw permiting them to move apart. A snake can separate its upper and lower jaws and also the two halves of its bottom jaw to swallow prey more than three times larger than its self.

GESTATION

In the wild, boas reach sexual maturity at two or three years and breed during the rainy season. If fed appropriately, most captive-raised boas will become sexually mature by the end of their third year. Once conception has occurred, boas usually remain pregnant for 4 to 10 months and then give birth to live young called neonates. They hold approximately 20 to 60 eggs internally until they hatch and then the hatchlings and the leathery shells are expelled from the mother snake. Neonates weigh approximately two to three ounces, are between 14 to 22 inches in length, and will eat soon after their first shed--about one week after birth.

LONGEVITY

Boas are among the longest lived of all snake species. Reports of boas living up to 20 years are common. One specimen at the Philadelphia Zoological Gardens lived for 40 years, 3 months and 14 days.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Grolier's Encyclopedia Vosjoli, Philippe de. The General Care and Maintenance of Red-Tailed Boas Wildlife Fact File