- Source: Indigo snake (species)
The indigo snake (Drymarchon corais), also known as the yellow-tail cribo, is a species of snake in the family Colubridae. This large colubrid snake is nonvenomous.
Taxonomy
Until recently, all Drymarchon were classified as subspecies of D. corais. However, North and Central populations are now assigned to different species (D. melanurus, D. couperi and D. kolpobasileus), and D. caudomaculatus and D. margaritae are recognised as separate species in South America.
Range
This snake is found in South America, including Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela as well as Trinidad and Tobago.
Diet
The species forages on the ground, sometimes climbing low vegetation. It feeds on a variety of prey species including fish, frogs, reptiles, reptile eggs, mammals, birds and bird eggs.
Gallery
References
Species Drymarchon corais at The Reptile Database
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Drymarchon
- Ular-derik besar
- Indigo snake (species)
- Eastern indigo snake
- Drymarchon
- Middle American indigo snake
- Margarita indigo snake
- Falcon indigo snake
- List of largest snakes
- Drymarchon melanurus erebennus
- Pantherophis obsoletus
- Rat snake