Published January 7, 2021. Updated June 13, 2024. Open access. | Purchase book ❯ |
Northern Eyelash-Boa (Tropidophis boulengeri)
Reptiles of Ecuador | Serpentes | Tropidophiidae | Tropidophis boulengeri
English common names: Northern Eyelash-Boa, Rough-scaled Boa.
Spanish common names: Pudridora del Chocó, dormilona, boa enana áspera, boa de pestañas, boa pigmea de Boulenger.
Recognition: ♂♂ 34.8 cmMaximum distance from the snout to the tip of the tail. ♀♀ 35 cmMaximum distance from the snout to the tip of the tail.. Tropidophis boulengeri is one of the most distinct snakes of the Chocó rainforest.1 It looks like a stick, it has a stout stick-like body, dragon face, extremely short tail, and small scaly “eyelashes.” The dorsal scales are strongly keeled and arranged in 29–33 rows at mid-body (Fig. 1).2,3 The eyes are deep reddish-brown with cream speckles and the belly is pinkish brown with black blotches. Adults have an essentially patternless brown dorsum, whereas juveniles have light cream blotches interspersed with black ones.1 Tropidophis boulengeri differs from T. gularis by having scaly eyelashes.1,4
Natural history: Tropidophis boulengeri is a semi-aquatic and terrestrial1 snake that inhabits old-growth to moderately disturbed rainforests, although individuals occasionally venture into plantations and pastures near the forest border.5 Northern Eyelash-Boas are nocturnal. At dusk, they emerge from their diurnal hideouts and forage slowly (less than 0.2–0.5 cm/s or slightly faster than a snail)1 on the forest floor besides bodies of water, usually along streams, but also temporary ponds and lagoons.5 Active individuals are often spotted motionless on damp leaf-litter, mud, rocks, trunks, and even on twigs and leaves 30–60 cm above the ground.5 They are good, fast swimmers, but the majority of their time in the water is spent waiting motionless with the head submerged in ambush posture.6 Their activity seems to be higher during drizzly or rainy nights,1,5 but they may also remain in the same resting place for days or even weeks.1 During the day, Northern Eyelash-Boas hide under rocks, rotten logs, and in leaf-litter.5 They are ambush predators that grab prey with unexpected speed.1,6 The snakes wrap the prey in several coils and constrict it for 30–120 minutes, whereas other times they consume it without strangling it.1,6 Their diet includes fish, frogs (such as Leptodacylus melanonotus), and tadpoles.1,5,6 One T. boulengeri female from Panamá contained six developed embryos7 and two females from Ecuador “gave birth” to six live young, each.1,8 The neonates measured 12.6–12.8 cm in total length.1 Northern Eyelash-Boas rely primarily on their slow movements and uncanny resemblance of a stick to go unnoticed.They are calm, peaceful snakes.1 If grabbed, some individuals become rigid and immobile, others roll into a tight ball, produce a musky and distasteful cloacal secretion, and yet others submerge completely for a short time.1,5
Conservation: Least Concern Believed to be safe from extinction given current circumstances..9 Tropidophis boulengeri is listed in this category because the species is widely distributed throughout areas that have not been heavily affected by deforestation and, therefore, is considered to be facing no major immediate extinction threats.9 The most important threat to the long-term survival of the species is large-scale deforestation. It estimated that, in Ecuador, approximately 62% of the habitat of T. boulengeri has been destroyed.10 Northern Eyelash-Boas also suffer from direct killing as they are often mistaken with venomous snakes.5 They also have been a target of the illegal trade of wildlife for decades,1 and are considered a highly-priced rarity among collectors in Europe and the United States.
Distribution: Tropidophis boulengeri is native to the Chocó biome, from eastern Panamá, through western Colombia, to northwestern Ecuador (Fig. 2).
Etymology: The name Tropidophis comes from the Greek words tropis (=keel) and ophis (=serpent),11 referring to the keeled dorsal scales. The specific epithet boulengeri honors Belgian-British zoologist George Albert Boulenger (1858–1937), who described and gave scientific names to thousands of animal species, including 598 reptiles that are recognized as valid species today.12
See it in the wild: Northern Eyelash-Boas can be seen at a rate of about once every few days along bodies of water in well-preserved forested areas throughout their area of distribution. In Ecuador, they are particularly abundant in Canandé Reserve and Bilsa Biological Reserve. The snakes are more easily located at night by walking along streams when the ambient humidity is high.
Special thanks to Jordi David Rivera Albuja for symbolically adopting the Northern Eyelash-Boa and helping bring the Reptiles of Ecuador book project to life.
Click here to adopt a species.
Author: Alejandro ArteagaaAffiliation: Khamai Foundation, Quito, Ecuador.
Photographer: Jose VieiraaAffiliation: Tropical Herping (TH), Quito, Ecuador.,bAffiliation: ExSitu, Quito, Ecuador.
How to cite? Arteaga A (2021) Northern Eyelash-Boa (Tropidophis boulengeri). In: Arteaga A, Bustamante L, Vieira J (Eds) Reptiles of Ecuador: Life in the middle of the world. Available from: www.reptilesofecuador.com. DOI: 10.47051/FAIK2894
Literature cited:
- Lehmann HD (1969) Beobachtungen bei der Haltung und Aufzucht von Trachyboa boulengeri (Serpentes, Boidae). Salamandra 6: 32–42.
- Peters JA, Donoso-Barros B (1970) Catalogue of Neotropical Squamata: part I, snakes. Bulletin of the United States National Museum, Washington, D.C., 347 pp.
- MECN (2010) Serie herpetofauna del Ecuador: El Chocó esmeraldeño. Museo Ecuatoriano de Ciencias Naturales, Quito, 232 pp.
- Peters WCH (1860) Eine neue Gattung von Riesenschlangen vor, welche von einem gebornen Preussen, Hrn. Carl Reiss, in Guayaquil nebst mehreren anderen werthvollen Naturalien dem zoologischen Museum zugesandt worden ist. Monatsberichte der Königlichen Preussische Akademie des Wissenschaften zu Berlin 1860: 200–202.
- Field notes, Reptiles of Ecuador book project.
- Dwyer Q, Arteaga A, Barrio-Amorós CL, Fagle A (2018) Trachyboa boulengeri. Diet. Herpetological Review 49: 359–360.
- Barbour T (1937) Ovoviviparity in Trachyboa. Copeia 1937: 139.
- Unpublished data by Ernesto Arbeláez.
- Ibáñez R, Jaramillo C, Rivas G, Gutiérrez-Cárdenas P, Yánez-Muñoz M, Cisneros-Heredia DF (2019) Trachyboa boulengeri. The IUCN Red List of threatened species. Available from: www.iucnredlist.org. DOI: 10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-2.RLTS.T203214A2762365.en
- MAE (2012) Línea base de deforestación del Ecuador continental. Ministerio del Ambiente del Ecuador, Quito, 30 pp.
- Brown RW (1956) Composition of scientific words. Smithsonian Books, Washington D.C., 882 pp.
- Uetz P, Freed P, Hošek J (2021) The reptile database. Available from: www.reptile-database.org
Appendix 1: Locality data used to create the distribution map of Tropidophis boulengeri in Ecuador (Fig. 2). Go to the section on symbols and abbreviations for a list of acronyms used.
Country | Province | Locality | Source |
Colombia | Nariño | Carretera a Tumaco | Borja-Acosta & Galeano Muñoz 2023 |
Colombia | Nariño | Milagros–Teheran | Carvajal-Cogollo et al. 2024 |
Colombia | Nariño | Reserva Natural El Pangán | Photo by Hernán Arias |
Colombia | Nariño | Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Sede Nariño | Pinto-Erazo et al. 2020 |
Ecuador | Bolívar | San Francisco | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Carchi | Destacamento Militar | Yánez-Muñoz et al. 2009 |
Ecuador | Carchi | Tobar Donoso | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Cotopaxi | El Jardín de los Sueños | Photo by Christophe Pellet |
Ecuador | Cotopaxi | Quevedo, 40 km E of | USNM 142597; VertNet |
Ecuador | Cotopaxi | Yakusinchi | Photo by Jane Sloan |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Bilsa Biological Reserve | Ortega-Andrade et al. 2010 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Bosque Protector La Chiquita | Online multimedia |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Bosque Protector La Perla | Reptiles of Ecuador book database |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Bosque Protector Otokiki | Elicio Tapia, pers. comm. |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Calle Mansa | Morales 2004 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Canandé Reserve | This work; Fig. 1 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Centro de Fauna Silvestre James Brown | Photo by Salvador Palacios |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Chapulá | Morales 2004 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Charco Vicente | Morales 2004 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Concepción | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Durango | Photo by Morley Read |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Durango, 4 km N of | Online multimedia |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Estero Pote | Rodríguez-Guerra & Guerra-Correa 2024 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | FCAT Reserve | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Golondrinas | Cisneros-Heredia 2004 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Itapoa Reserve | Reptiles of Ecuador book database |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Las Mareas | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Lita, 17 km W of | Cisneros-Heredia 2004 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Lote Salvadores | This work; Fig. 1 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Mayronga, Lagarto | Torres-Carvajal et al. 2019 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Pajonal | Morales 2004 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Playa de Oro | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Río Hoja Blanca | Reptiles of Ecuador book database |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | San Francisco del Cabo | Yánez-Muñoz et al. 2010 |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Tesoro Escondido Reserve | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Tundaloma Lodge | Reptiles of Ecuador book database |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Verdecanandé | Reptiles of Ecuador book database |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Vida Rosero Reserve | Reptiles of Ecuador book database |
Ecuador | Esmeraldas | Zapallo Grande | Cisneros-Heredia 2004 |
Ecuador | Guayas | Comunidad Shuar Río Limón | Photo by Eduardo Zavala |
Ecuador | Imbabura | Lita, 5 km E of | Cisneros-Heredia 2004 |
Ecuador | Los Ríos | Centro Científico Río Palenque | KU 152601; VertNet |
Ecuador | Los Ríos | Quevedo | USNM 60518; VertNet |
Ecuador | Manabí | Cerro Pata de Pájaro | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Manabí | La Crespa | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Manabí | Maicito | MHNG 1326.092; collection database |
Ecuador | Manabí | Quiebra Cabeza | Photo by Carlos Robles |
Ecuador | Pichincha | El Chalpi–Saguangal | Yánez-Muñoz et al. 2009 |
Ecuador | Pichincha | Lower Mashpi | Reptiles of Ecuador book database |
Ecuador | Pichincha | Mashpi Reserve | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Pichincha | Mindo, 20 km W of | USNM 204103; VertNet |
Ecuador | Pichincha | Puerto Quito | MHNG 2284.024 |
Ecuador | Pichincha | Rainforest Monterreal | iNaturalist; photo examined |
Ecuador | Pichincha | Rancho Suamox | Photo by Rafael Ferro |
Ecuador | Pichincha | Río Blanco | USNM 204104; VertNet |
Ecuador | Pichincha | Selva Virgen | Reptiles of Ecuador book database |
Ecuador | Pichincha | Río Silanche Bird Sancturary | Reptiles of Ecuador book database |
Ecuador | Santo Domingo de los Tsáchilas | Finca Gloria | Photo by Regdy Vera |
Ecuador | Santo Domingo de los Tsáchilas | La Florida, 5 km W of | KU 218411; VertNet |
Ecuador | Santo Domingo de los Tsáchilas | Santo Domingo de los Colorados | Torres-Carvajal et al. 2019 |