Boa Constrictor
Boa Constrictors are found in Central and South America and some islands of the Caribbean. They can grow to be 13 feet and weigh about 60 pounds. Most of a constrictor's diet consists of rodents, but animals as big as ocelots have been known to have been eaten.
Boa Constrictors are nocturnal, but will bask in the day because night temperatures are too cold. Boa constrictors like dry weather for mating season, thus it takes place in April until August. Male snakes will wrestle for the right to breed with the female. Female snakes can hold the egg inside them for a year, but when the baby is born, it is only 20 inches long. Young boa constrictors eat small mice and birds until they are old enough to eat bigger food.
Boa constrictors can be found in a wide variety of places, from a tropical forest to a barren desert. Boa coloring varies, but a typical base coat will be brown, grey, or cream, spattered with brown or brown-red spots. |
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