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Murghzar Zoo, Islamabad,

This Python's natural habitat is the desert of the Sindh province in Pakistan.

November 2011,

Nikon D7000, Nikkor 18-105@105mm,

F/5.6, 1/400s, 200 ISO

Masdevallia macrura 'Python' - John Leathers

Python at Alligator Bay, Normandy

 

PERMISSION TO USE: Please check the licence for this photo on Flickr. If the photo is marked with the Creative Commons licence, you are welcome to use this photo free of charge for any purpose including commercial. I am not concerned with how attribution is provided - a link to my flickr page or my name is fine. If used in a context where attribution is impractical, that's fine too. I enjoy seeing where my photos have been used so please send me links, screenshots or photos where possible. If the photo is not marked with the Creative Commons licence, only my friends and family are permitted to use it.

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Python vert vivant en Papouasie Nouvelle Guinée et au Nord de l'Australie. Les colorations varient d'un individu à l'autre et principalement en fonction des régions.

Biodôme de Montréal mars 2007.

Lovely snake, explores in the evening! Definitely settled! Still hasn't eaten but I'm not yet worried.

There must be a way out!!!

2021 Florida Python Challenge® Media Event

 

FWC photo by Carol Lyn Parrish

Curious or mobbing birds will often draw your attention to a predator, this time a large python.

Thanks to Hamilton Reptiles (Next Years Reptiles) for modeling!

 

A Woma Python that decided to move just as I took my shot, still worth posting I think :)

female bumblebee ball python eating a rat pup

Aitor talking about Ducksboard in the Python Madrid Meeting

Robert Edman, Anne Gorden-Vega (Python Contractor), FWC Photo by Alicia Wellman

This is a 17 foot Golden Python

Field Museum, Chicago

Lunch time! Another huge Burmese Pythom makes quick work of an unfortunate chicken. You can see the poor chicken's feet dead centre. The snake'shead is the triangular patch dead centre, just above the chicken. In the wild, a chicken would be like eating a couple of Smarties for the huge snake. Although these critters prefer to eat small prey, they can and do take down large prey like antelope, pigs and the like. The can swallow prey upto four times their diameter. Burmese Pythons are now proving to be a nuisance in the USA where pet owners, who had bought them as babies to keep as pets were unprepared for the huge size they grow to and have been randomly releasing them in the wild. Hundreds of formerly captive Burmese Pythons are now crawling all around the USA where they kill and eat deer and other native species and although they do not generally bite humans, are a big hazard to humans as well, especially as they can swallow a small child. (Al Ain, UAE, Aug. 2008)

get them while they are hot.

inquire here

Reticulated Python at a cheesy tourist snake show. I saw the same show on my first visit to Bangkok nearly 20 years ago. Photos from that trip show the same floor covering, the same 'show', and hopefully, the same handlers. Still a sad place though, but hard to avoid if you take a longtail boat trip around the Thonburi klongs.

Bangkok, Thailand. January 2006

Python in Mt Cootha botanical gardens

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Yearling Mojave Ball python

Python at the Bluebonnet Swamp in Baton Rouge.

Angolan Python - Python anchietae

La Menagerie, Jardin des Plantes, Paris, France

The Burmese python (Python bivittatus) is one of the five largest species of snakes in the world (about the third-largest as measured either by length

or weight). It is native to a large variation of tropic and subtropic areas

of South and Southeast Asia.

 

They are often found near water and are sometimes semi-aquatic,

but can also be found in trees. Wild individuals average 3.7 m long,

but have been known to reach 5.74 m .

 

Burmese pythons are mainly nocturnal rainforest dwellers. When young, they are equally at home on the ground and in trees, but as they gain girth, they tend to restrict most of their movements to the ground. They are also excellent swimmers, being able to stay submerged for up to half an hour. Burmese pythons spend the majority of their time hidden in the underbrush.

 

Like all snakes, the Burmese python is carnivorous. Its diet consists

primarily of appropriately sized birds and mammals. The snake uses its

sharp rearward-pointing teeth to seize its prey, then wraps its body

around the prey, at the same time contracting its muscles, killing

the prey by constriction. It is often found near human habitation due

to the presence of rats, mice, and other vermin as a food source.

 

Burmese pythons are often sold as pets Although this species has a reputation for docility, they are very powerful animals, capable of inflicting severe bites or even killing a keeper by constriction.

Python molurus bivittatus

 

A downright stunning adult male found crossing a canal during a crocodile survey in the Everglades. This snake had just shed and was downright stunning.

Photo/video shoot of captive Burmese pythons; Everglades National Park; March 31, 2015.

Python in the reptile exhibition at Tanus agricultural fair .

Photo/video shoot of captive Burmese pythons; Everglades National Park; March 31, 2015.

 

The reticulated python is Asia's largest snake and the longest species in the world. it is a highly common snake occurs mostly in lowland rainforest, plantations, agricultural areas and even in urban habitats.

Python reticulatus

 

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Florida Python Challengeâ„¢ 2020 Python Bowl Kickoff Event 1/10/20. The competition runs Jan. 10-19 and supports the delicate Greater Everglades Ecosystem.

The event includes:

•Sponsor Bass Pro Shops on site with one of two grand prize 570 Tracker Off Road ATVs.

•State experts on nonnative fish and wildlife available for media interviews.

•Live Burmese pythons and a live catching demonstration

•Pre-registered members of the public take part in a training to gain first-hand experience capturing a wild Burmese Python.

•A limited number of field bags free to participants registered for the Python Bowl who are present at the event.

 

FWC Photo by Carli Segelson

Scrub Python at Alligator Bay, Normandy

 

PERMISSION TO USE: Please check the licence for this photo on Flickr. If the photo is marked with the Creative Commons licence, you are welcome to use this photo free of charge for any purpose including commercial. I am not concerned with how attribution is provided - a link to my flickr page or my name is fine. If used in a context where attribution is impractical, that's fine too. I enjoy seeing where my photos have been used so please send me links, screenshots or photos where possible. If the photo is not marked with the Creative Commons licence, only my friends and family are permitted to use it.

lol I enjoy all my #snakes but i think i definately have a soft spot for #retics just got a nice shot of him on our #samsung tv

My two big burmese pythons shortly before I took them to my brother to take care of...last time I saw them alive. I was in the Navy at the time and was getting deployed and he agreed to watch them while I was gone, it didn't work out very well.

 

A little about the two snakes, the larger one I bought from a pet store very cheap since they got it from someone who caught it 'wild' in San Diego and it had bit several store employees. It was already eight feet long at this time so it was leaving 1/4inch teeth embedded when it was pried off. I took it home and it took about a year to get it tame enough to hold safely as long as it was nowhere near it's cage. I used to leave it in the living room where it would crawl under the cushions on the back of the couch leading to a scaley surprise when one sat down. It never once tried to bite me or anyone else while out of the cage, while in it's cage however it was mean and nasty, trying to bite even through the screen on the side.

The smaller snake was only a year old when I took this photo and was already eight feet long. I found they will eat far more than once a week or so, like every day. Both of them ate five pigeons and many rats a week and got testy if I slacked off on that routine.

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