Oxyrhopus melanogenys Tschudi, 1845
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1590/S0031-10492013001900001 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FC8789-FFBC-202F-FD5F-67C2FBE7F880 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Oxyrhopus melanogenys Tschudi, 1845 |
status |
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Oxyrhopus melanogenys Tschudi, 1845 View in CoL
Distribution: Oxyrhopus melanogenys occurs throughout Amazonian Brazil and western Peru ( Cunha & Nascimento, 1978; Dixon & Soini, 1986; Nascimento et al., 1987; Pérez-Santos & Moreno, 1988; Zaher, 1996; Frota, 2000; Santos-Costa, 2003; Duellman, 2005; Frota et al., 2005; Bernarde & Abe, 2006; França et al., 2006; Maschio, 2008; Silva et al., 2010; Bernarde et al., 2011; L.J. Vitt, unpublished data).
Habitat and time of activity: Oxyrhopus melanogenys is a moderate-sized pseudoboine (maximum SVL = 901 mm, female; this study) and the data available indicate that this is a terrestrial species (N = 6; Santos-Costa, 2003; Maschio, 2008; S. Morato, unpublished data; M. Sena, unpublished data; C. Strüssmann, unpublished data) that inhabits forests and it is active during the night (N = 6; Santos-Costa, 2003; Maschio, 2008; S. Morato, unpublished data).
Feeding: Oxyrhopus melanogenys is a diet generalist that feeds mainly on small mammals (N = 24) and lizards (N = 25; two Ameiva sp. , one Cnemidophorus sp. , one Colobossaura sp., one Leposoma sp. , one Hemidactylus sp. ), but also on birds (N = 3; two Ramphocaenus melanurus ) and occasionally on lizard eggs (N = 1) ( Nascimento et al., 1987, Santos-Costa, 2003; Maschio, 2008; Silva et al., 2010; Martins & Oliveira, unpublished data).
Reproduction: Clutch size varies from seven to 13 eggs (N = 8, mean = 9.7 eggs; this study). The smallest mature female was 410 mm SVL ( Bitar & Santos-Costa, 2006) and the smallest mature male was 310 mm SVL ( Bitar & Santos-Costa, 2006).
Defense: Maschio (2008) reports that when handled O. melanogenys can expel cloacal secretions.
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