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Large elapids and arboreality: the ecology of Jameson's green mamba (Dendroaspis jamesoni) in an Afrotropical forested region

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TLDR
It seems that this species inhabits a wide variety of habitats (including secondary forest patches and the plantation-forest mosaic), and that its local distribution is not influenced by the Presence of any macrohabitat parameter.
Abstract
Several aspects of the ecology of Jameson’s green mamba Dendroaspis jamesoni jamesoni (Traill, 1843), a large-sized arboreal elapid snake, are studied in southern Nigeria. This species 18 common and widespread in the region studied. On the basis of the analysis of both the habitats of capture of the various specimens and the results of a logistical regression model, it seems that this species inhabits a wide variety of habitats (including secondary forest patches and the plantation-forest mosaic), and that its local distribution is not influencedby the Presence of any macrohabitat parameter. Green mambas were observed both in the dry and in the wet season, without any statistical bias toward a particular season. Adult sex-ratio was a Pproximately 1 : 1. Maleswere significantly longer than females. All adult mamba dietary records involved warm-blooded prey (mainly birds), whereas young mambas fed also upon lizards and toads. Nearly all the prey eaten by adult mambas were arboreal, and thus there was no support for the recent hypothesis that adult mambas develop anorientationto forageon terrestrial rodents. Male-male combats and matings were observed in December, January, and February (dry season), and gravid females were collected in April, May, and June (wet season). Females produced 7-16 eggs (mean 10.9), and litter size was Positively correlated with maternal length.

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Are snake populations in widespread decline

TL;DR: The authors' results show that, of 17 snake populations from the UK, France, Italy, Nigeria and Australia, 11 have declined sharply over the same relatively short period of time with five remaining stable and one showing signs of a marginal increase.
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Les serpents d'Afrique occidentale et centrale

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a bibliographie de serpents from the Mauritanie and the Congo, which is composed of morsures, caractéristiques, origines et évolution des ophidiens, composition des venins, symptomatologie des envenimations and traitement.
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Feeding ecology of North American gopher snakes (Pituophis catenifer, Colubridae)

TL;DR: The feeding ecology of the North American gopher snake, Pituophis catenifer, was studied based on the stomach contents of more than 2600 preserved and free-ranging specimens, and published and unpublished dietary records to assess size-dependent and geographical variation in feeding preferences of gape-limited predators.
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Comparative feeding strategies and dietary plasticity of the sympatric cobras Naja melanoleuca and Naja nigricollis in three diverging Afrotropical habitats

TL;DR: It is observed that sexual size dimorphism was minor in both species and in all habitat types, and that intersexual differences in pr...
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sexual size dimorphism in snakes revisited

TL;DR: Analysis of published and original data on the degree of sexual size dimorphism in snakes suggests that a previously documented correlation between SSD and geographic distribution is due to phylogenetic conservatism rather than to any functional relationship between the two variables.
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Reproduction in Australian elapid snakes I. Testicular cycles and mating seasons

TL;DR: Testicular cycles and mating seasons of eight species of elapid snakes are described, consistent with the hypothesis that the times of production of spermatozoa, and retention of spermutozoa in the vas deferens, are adapted to the timing of the mating season.
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Food resource partitioning of a community of snakes in a swamp rainforest of south-eastern Nigeria

TL;DR: There was no statistically significant difference between snake guilds as far asmean prey size is concerned, but the various species within each guild differed significantly in terms of mean prey size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Allometric Patterns in the Ecology of Australian Snakes

TL;DR: The degree to which absolute body size is correlated with other ecological variables in interspecific comparisons is examined and interspecific associations between ecological traits are investigated after the confounding effect of absolute body sizes is removed from the analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology of Highly Venomous Snakes: the Australian Genus Oxyuranus (Elapidae)

TL;DR: Over recent decades, taipans have become more common relative to other large elapid species: it is suggested that this may be due to the introduction of the toxic cane toad as well as habitat modification by agriculture.