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The King?

caparu Mar 07, 2006 04:49 AM

C.c. vs. B.a

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signature file edited, contact an admin. 2/13/06

Replies (6)

caparu Mar 07, 2006 04:50 AM

n/p

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signature file edited, contact an admin. 2/13/06

regalringneck Mar 08, 2006 06:21 AM

...very nice very nice....did you take that shot? Any details to go along w/it???? I showed it to my grl & she musk't w/ excitement...

caparu Mar 08, 2006 09:44 PM

I was lucky enough to take the photo. What sort of details do you want?
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signature file edited, contact an admin. 2/13/06

regalringneck Mar 09, 2006 06:11 AM

...hiya, that looks like a Bothrops going down...so im assuming you were in the field...so Im thinkn...like where the shot was taken/relative lengths of the 2 snakes...approx time to overpower & ingest, weather or not the venom appeared to take effect or weather constriction was the mechanism of death....

I also assume you are not the photographer of that 1st photo which has been floating on the net for several years now...

caparu Mar 09, 2006 06:30 AM

I am the photographer who took the first picture. Didn't realise it'd gotten round so much!

I spent almost 5 years in the Colombian Amazon - mainly doing my PhD research on the lizard community there.

'The' photo, actually hides alot of info. Technical details - EOS 1, 15mm lens (fisheye), 1/2 second, f8. Because of the fisheye lens, you have no idea how big those snakes were! The Clelia was a big snake, about 7 feet. And the B.atrox was the largest I had ever seen, a good 5ft+. You can just see in the photo, that the Bothrops had eaten the night before (a spiny rat). The Clelia was 'stuck' at this bulge, when discovered at 5.30AM (sunrise). I photographed them for a good hour and a half. The close-ups were done after moving the snakes somewhat, for better light, but the fisheye shots were done in-situ.

I received a runners up award in Animal Behaviour, BBC Wildlife Photographer of the Year - the most prestigious wildlife photography awards. So I am very proud of that shot.

Clelia was rare in the field. In fact, I only saw 4 in the whole five years. However, you should remember that very few snakes are common in the Amazon. People believe you'll be tripping over them, but this simply isn't the case.

If there are any specific ecology Q's you or anyone has about Amazonian snakes, make a post - I'll try and answer them if I can.

Cheers,
Ian

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signature file edited, contact an admin. 2/13/06

regalringneck Mar 10, 2006 07:32 AM

....wow, Ian that is truly an incredible shot, nice to finally meet the lad who caught it...I was advised much the same by WW that Clelia were not common (& I agree w/ your assessment of tropical abundance)yet Vitt advised they were fairly common in Brazil. So did that Clelia manage to engulf the viper or did it give up eventually?
Have you any experiences/in-situ jpgs/etc... w/ Conophis, aka the "road guarders"???

Posted by: caparu at Thu Mar 9 06:30:07 2006 [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ]

I am the photographer who took the first picture. Didn't realise it'd gotten round so much!

I spent almost 5 years in the Colombian Amazon - mainly doing my PhD research on the lizard community there.

'The' photo, actually hides alot of info. Technical details - EOS 1, 15mm lens (fisheye), 1/2 second, f8. Because of the fisheye lens, you have no idea how big those snakes were! The Clelia was a big snake, about 7 feet. And the B.atrox was the largest I had ever seen, a good 5ft . You can just see in the photo, that the Bothrops had eaten the night before (a spiny rat). The Clelia was 'stuck' at this bulge, when discovered at 5.30AM (sunrise). I photographed them for a good hour and a half. The close-ups were done after moving the snakes somewhat, for better light, but the fisheye shots were done in-situ.

I received a runners up award in Animal Behaviour, BBC Wildlife Photographer of the Year - the most prestigious wildlife photography awards. So I am very proud of that shot.

Clelia was rare in the field. In fact, I only saw 4 in the whole five years. However, you should remember that very few snakes are common in the Amazon. People believe you'll be tripping over them, but this simply isn't the case.

If there are any specific ecology Q's you or anyone has about Amazonian snakes, make a post - I'll try and answer them if I can.

Cheers,
Ian

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_____

signature file edited, contact an admin. 2/13/06

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