| Common
Name: |
Green
Mamba
|
|
| Scientific
Name: |
Dendroaspis
viridis |
| Family: |
Elapidae |
| Order: |
Squamata |
| Class: |
Reptilia |
| Range: |
Most
of East Africa from Kenya to Zimbabwe |
| Habitat: |
Coastal
and forest regions |
| Description: |
Green
mambas have lime green bodies and yellow tails with the majority of
scales creating a fishnet effect. They are about 78 inches long with
a slender build. |
| Life
Expectancy: |
A
wild caught adult individual survived 18 years and 8 months in captivity. |
| Sexual
Maturity: |
At
least by 18 months |
| Diet: |
In
the wild, they feed mostly on birds and lizards. In the Zoo, they
are fed rats and mice. |
| Status: |
Not
listed |
| Behaviors: |
Non-territorial.
Mambas rely on abandoned termite mounds and animal holes for shelter.
Other areas include sparse brush and rocky areas. Usually diurnal,
green mambas become somewhat nocturnal in areas where populations
are large. Enemies are larger animals and humans. Green mambas will
usually flee, but if cornered or trapped, will hiss and/or strike
out to defend themselves. The green mamba injects whitish venom when
it strikes prey. This venom affects the victim's nervous system; it
mostly affects the heartrate and respiration. Green mambas have a
habit of falling onto arboreal prey from higher branches, sometimes
dropping to the ground with their catch. The green mamba travels throughout
its life alone.
The mamba differs from other snakes in that after striking its
prey it leaves it to die. Digestion of a kill requires eight to
ten hours.
Mating occurs in spring after the male finds a female from her
scent trail. Copulation can be drawn out to over a couple hours
or days. After copulation, the female will lay 10-15 eggs. The eggs
are long and thin and range from 1.5 to 2.3 inches long and 1 to
1.4 inches in diameter.
|
| Adaptations: |
The
green in the mamba's body is used to help hide it in the trees. The
mamba's jaw is adapted for feeding. With elastic skin and a loosely
attached lower jaw, it can swallow prey up to four times the size
of its head. Smell is detected by using the tongue, which is also
sensitive to vibrations. Vibrations may also be detected from the
surfaces through the mamba's body. When confronted by predators, mambas
prefer to flee, but will strike when threatened. |
| Special
Interest: |
If
a bird flies too close, the green mamba catches the bird in less than
a second. When a predator comes near, the green mamba darts away at
the extraordinary rate of 7 miles per hour, twice the speed of any
North American snake. |
| Folklore: |
The
snake is associated in many countries with the Devil and dark forces.
In the Bible, it was the Devil in serpent form who tempted Eve to
take the Forbidden Fruit. |
| Conservation: |
n/a |
| Jacksonville
Zoo History: |
The
West African green mamba has been in our collection since January
1998. |
|
|
|
Revised:
July 2001 |