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Lachesis muta
Lachesis muta is a venomous pitviper species found in South America. Two subspecies are currently recognized, including the nominate subspecies described here.[2] Additional recommended knowledge
DescriptionAdults grow to an average of 2 to 2.5 m, although 3 m is not too unusual. The largest recorded specimen was almost 3.65 m long, making this the largest of all pit vipers and the longest venomous snake in the western hemisphere.[3] The head is broad and very distinct from the narrow neck. The snout is broadly rounded. There is no canthus. A pair of small internasals is present, separated by small scales. The supraoculars are narrow. Other parts of the crown are covered with very small scales. Laterally, the second supralabial forms the anterior border of the loreal pit, while the third is very large. The eye is separated from the supralabials by 4-5 rows of small scales.[4] The body is cylindrical, tapered and moderately stout. Midbody there are 31-37 nonoblique rows of dorsal scales which are heavily keeled with bulbous tubercles and feebly imbricate. There are 200-230 ventral scales. The tail is short with 32-50 mainly paired subcaudals, followed by 13-17 rows of small spines and a terminal spine.[4] The color pattern consists of a yellowish, reddish or grey-brown ground color, overlaid with a series of dark brown or black dorsal blotches that form lateral inverted triangles of the same color. The lateral pattern may be precisely or indistinctly defined, normally pale at the center.[3] Common namesSouth American bushmaster. Known as the mapepire zanana or mapepire grande (pronounced ma-pa(y)-PEE za-Na-na or ma-pa(Y)-PEE GRAN-dey) in Trinidad and Tobago,[5][6] and surucucú in the Amazon Basin. In Colombia it is known as verrugosa[7] or verrugoso due to the warty look of the scales. EtymologyLachesis is one of the three Fates in Greek mythology and was supposed to assign to man his term of life -- something this species is certainly capable of doing. The species is similar in appearance to rattlesnakes and vibrates its tail vigorously when alarmed, but has no rattle and was therefore called mutus (later muta), which is Latin for dumb or mute. However, when in the undergrowth, the tail actually makes quite a loud rustling noise.[8] Geographic rangeFound in South America in the equatorial forests east of the Andes: Colombia, eastern Ecuador, Peru, northern Bolivia, eastern and southern Venezuela, Guyana, Surinam, French Guiana and much of northern Brazil. The type locality is "Surinami" (Surinam).[1] The species is also found on the Island of Trinidad.[6] HabitatOccurs in primary and secondary forests; adjacent fields and cleared areas.[3] In Trinidad it tends to prefer hilly and mountainous regions.[9] VenomSome reports suggest that this species produces a large amount of venom that is weak compared to some other vipers.[10] Others, however, suggest that such conclusions may not be accurate. These animals are badly affected by stress and often do not last long in captivity. This makes it difficult to obtain "good, healthy" venom for study purposes. For example, Bolaños (1972) observed that venom yield from his specimens fell from 233 mg to 64 mg while they remained in his care. As the stress of being milked regularly has this effect on venom yield, it is reasoned that it may also affect venom toxicity. This may explain the disparity described by Hardy and Haad (1998) of the low laboratory toxicity versus the high mortality rate of bite victims.[11] Brown (1973) gives the following LD50 values for mice: 1.5 mg/kg IV, 1.6–6.2 mg/kg IP, 6.0 mg/kg SC. He also mentions a venom yield of 200-411 mg.[12] Subspecies
TaxonomySome sources still refer to two additional subspecies, L. m. melanocephala and L. m. stenophrys.[13] However, both were elevated to species level by Zamudio and Green in 1997 (see L. melanocephala and L. stenophrys).[1] See also
References
Further reading
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Lachesis_muta". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |