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This is a sub-adult Bismarck ringed python. The hatchlings are bright orange with black stripes. As they get older the orange dulls but they gain a beautiful rainbow-like color which can easily be seen in the sun. This one is a male named Nightshade.
So very many skippers in the canyon, and nearly all of them on Arizona thistle.
Phylum Arthropoda - Arthropods
Class Insecta - Insects
Order Lepidoptera - Butterflies and Moths
Superfamily Hesperioidea - Skippers
Family Hesperiidae - Skippers
Subfamily Hesperiinae - Grass Skippers
Genus Atrytonopsis
Species python - Python Skipper
This ,6m.long,30kg. snake was hungry and try to swallow the leg of Golan, who runs the reptile house in matzuva
this python in albur, bohol now weighs 250 kilos about 26 ft long and body diameter of 12 inches. it is fed with a 50 kg of live pig every 28 days. this was in captivity since 1996 and its only about 5 ft and weighs 5 kgs.
Reaching high in the tree the python vine looks like it is about to strangle the tree. Yet coming back months lager the tree does not appear to be any the less for wear having hosted the vine for a number of months or years.
Pas vraiment rare autour et dans le parc de Khao Yai (nous en avons vu deux en moins de deux jours), les pythons viennent dans les grottes et grimpent sur les murs pour attraper les chauves-souris. (Parc national Khao Yai - Thaïlande)
Carpet pythons are not rare where we live in the Gold Coast hinterland. This is one that came to visit in 2014.
Kiwi PyCon X took place in Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand, from 23 to 25 August 2019.
Photo by Ben Bradshaw
I popped into town today (Saturday) and while on The Moor, I noticed a couple collecting money for the Thornberry Animal Sanctuary www.thornberry-animal-sanctuary.org/index.php and the man had a snake! So I just had to go and investigate. Apparently she's his own pet snake, and it a type of python which is friendly and won't harm you. She has beautiful markings and her skin was incredibly smooth, like a highly polished wooden floor! She's about 5ft long. She seemed very happy to investigate by flicking her forked tongue. I've always wanted to touch a snake, and now I have! Lovely.
Carpet pythons are not rare where we live in the Gold Coast hinterland. This is one that came to visit in 2010.
A village snake-man in Dambulla Sri Lanka who earns a living with his exotic pets like this fully grown Python
National Geographic photographer and Nikon Ambassador Roger Strandli Brendhagen returned to Bergen during the city's most popular annual photography exhibition to redo his triumph from last time: Nikon Walk of Macro, taking interested Nikon photographers (and a few others too) from all over Bergen to Akvariet to make sure all the reptiles and amphibians there won't be able to see for the next few months.
With the photographers armed with macro lenses and flashes of all shapes and sizes, from 60mm to 200mm, from speedlights to ray flashes to dedicated macro flashes, the poor reptiles never knew what hit 'em. For me, this meant a welcome reencounter with my friend from last time, Mr. Python Regius. Though using the same lens as before, this time it was actually my own. =P
This time too there was a competition, and the best picture will be awarded a Nikkor 60mm ED AF-S Micro. This is my contribution, hope I'm in better luck this time! =)
Update: I was in a bit more luck this time, actually - this photo won the competition! =D
I believe this is quite a rare shot, actually - of the couple of hours we spent there, the snake almost never did anything like this. I was lucky to have my finger ready at the trigger AND the snake in focus when it happened. Lucky shot, indeed!