Python brongersmai


Python brongersmai, commonly known as Brongersma's short-tailed python, blood python and red short-tailed python, is a nonvenomous python species native to the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra and adjacent small islands.

Etymology

The specific name, brongersmai, is in honor of Dutch herpetologist Leo Brongersma.

Distribution and habitat

Python brongersmai is found in peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra east of the central dividing range of mountains, Bangka Island and other islands in the Strait of Malacca, including the Lingga Islands, Riau islands, and Pinang. and Thailand. The natural habitat of P. brongersmai is often marshes and tropical swamps.

Behaviour

Python brongersmai is a primarily crepuscular species – usually active around dawn and dusk.

Size

Hatchlings of P. brongersmai range from in total length. Adult males typically range from in total length, and females between although a few have been recorded at. These snakes generally look overweight due to their robust structure.

Lifespan

Most experts agree that P. brongersmai can live 20 years or more in captivity if proper care is given.

Coloration

The color pattern of P. brongersmai consists of rich, bright red to orange to a duller rusty red ground color, although populations with yellow and brown are known. This is overlaid with yellow and tan blotches and stripes that run the length of the body, as well as tan and black spots that extend up the flanks. The belly is white, often with small black markings. The head is usually a shade of grey; individual snakes can change how light and dark the head is. A white postocular stripe runs down and back from the posterior edge of the eye.

Reproduction

Python brongersmai is oviparous, with up to 30 eggs being laid at a time. The female coils around her eggs and shivers her body, producing heat to incubate the eggs properly.

Commercial trade

Once widely considered to be generally unpredictable and aggressive, P. brongersmai is gradually becoming more common among herpetoculturists. Formerly, many of the specimens in captivity were wild-caught adults from Malaysia. These are known to be more aggressive than those from Indonesia, from which most of the wild-caught, wild-bred, and captive-bred stock are now descended. Captive-raised juveniles generally become mild-tempered, somewhat-predictable adults. This, combined with several new brightly colored captive bloodlines, is helping to boost the popularity of these much-maligned snakes among reptile hobbyists.
Python brongersmai is part of a commercial harvest for leather.

Taxonomy

This species was first described by Olive Griffith Stull in 1938 as Python curtus brongersmai, a subspecies of Python curtus. This taxon has since been elevated and recognised as a full species, Python brongersmai, by :fr:Olivier Sylvain Gérard Pauwels|Pauwels et al..