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GREEN TREE PYTHON
 
   
SCIENTIFIC CLASSIFICATION
FAST FACTS
FUN FACTS
ECOLOGY & CONSERVATION
BIBLIOGRAPHY
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SCIENTIFIC CLASSIFICATION
COMMON NAME: green tree python, green python, Papuan tree python
KINGDOM: Animalia
PHYLUM: Chordata
CLASS: Reptilia
ORDER: Squamata
FAMILY: Boidae
GENUS SPECIES: Chondropython (coarse scales) viridis (green)
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FAST FACTS
DESCRIPTION: Various shades of green with broken, vertebral stripe of white or yellow running down their back; may be spots of blue, white, and yellow scattered over the body; slender, compressed body; diamond shaped head
SIZE: 160-180 cm (64-72 in.); maximum 220 cm (88 in.)
WEIGHT: No data
DIET: Tree lizards, birds, small mammals, and other small arboreal vertebrates
INCUBATION: 45-52 days
CLUTCH SIZE 6-30 eggs
SEXUAL MATURITY: 3 years
LIFE SPAN: Can exceed 20 years; longest-lived record is 28 yr. 3 mos.
RANGE: Northeast Australia, New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Aru Islands
HABITAT: Rainforests
POPULATION: GLOBAL No data
STATUS: IUCN No data
CITES Appendix II
USFWS No data
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FUN FACTS
1. Newborn green tree pythons are bright yellow. orange, or brick red and do not develop green coloring for 6-8 months.
2. These pythons lure their food by sitting very still on a branch and dangling their tail. Curious about the wiggling tail, the prey gets close enough for a strike.
3. Green tree pythons spend much of their time coiled around branches, situated so that their head lies right in the middle of their coils, similar to a saddle laying over a branch.
4. The biology of green tree python has provided scientists with an excellent example of what is called parallel evolution. The green tree python looks and acts much like its South American relative, the emerald tree boa. However, the resemblance in appearance and behavior nearly all the two have in common. Boas bear live young; python species are oviparous.
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ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION

No data
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BIBLIOGRAPHY

Bauchot, Roland (ed.). Snakes: A Natural History. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., Inc., 1994.
Barker, David G. and Barker, Tracy M. Pythons of the World, Volume I, Australia. First Edition. Advanced Vivarium Systems, Inc. 1994.

Ernst, Carl H., and Zug, George R. Snakes in Question. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1996.

Mattison, Chris. Snakes of the World. New York: Facts on File Publications, Inc., 1986.
Mehrtens, John M. Living Snakes of the World. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., Inc., 1987.
Stafford, Peter J. Pythons and Boas. New Jersey: T.F.H. Publications, Inc., 1986.
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