Micrurus rexanguis

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King Coralsnake
Inyur coralsnake02.jpg
Micrurus rexanguis
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Animalia
Phylum:
Chordata
Class:
Reptilia
Order:
Squamata
Family:
Elapidae
Genus:
Micrurus
Species:
M. rexanguis
Binomial name
Micrurus rexanguis
TBD
Mrexanguis range.png
Range of M. rexanguis

Micrurus rexanguis, common name: King Coralsnake also known as the Elapidé Grande in Inyurstan, is a large species of venomous elapid snake found in a variety of habitats across Inyursta and Cuscatlan.

Habitat

Overall, the King coralsnake can be considered a habitat generalist that occupies a wide variety of forested, savanna and grassland habitats and shows little selection for soil types. Rainforests, coastal dry forest, tropical savannas, submontane forest, submontane prairie and post-agricultural pastures are all frequently occupied by M. rexanguis. However, it is absent from high-altitude habitats, and further into Cuscatlan it becomes rare at the edge of its range into flooded river basin forests.

Temperature selection is believed to play a larger role than vegetative community, moisture or soil type. It is not found in arid/semi-arid regions where daytime temps commonly exceed >38oC/100oF, and subtropical regions where cold-season nighttime temps drop below 6oC/42oF.

Life History

This species is primarily nocturnal and crepuscular, with activity at lower elevations typically peaking between 30 minutes before sunset through 5 hours after sunset. A separate study found that activity in a submontane population peaked at 2 hours before sunset to 2.5 hours after sunset.

Diet

The King Coralsnake is a prolific predator of other snakes. It does not appear to favor any particular taxonomic group of snakes, though by proportion of abundance it appears viperids are less frequently targeted. Common prey includes Coffee snakes, Inyurstan rat snakes, and sp here... Studies have found that they have some resistance to the venom of other coralsnakes, though not complete immunity.

Reproduction

Breeding occurs April - early June, though may occur sooner in the more stable tropical climates breeding may extend January - August (though frequency still peaking in April & May). Egg-laying season is August-September across their range. Females may lay between 18-36 eggs in a single clutch, and larger more mature females may lay up to two clutches per season. Marcieno et al., 2016, reported that the "second clutch" is always smaller than the first, usually 50-70% the quantity of eggs as the first. A minimum "second clutch" size was reported at just 9 eggs.

Eggs hatch in 2-3 weeks. No maternal attendance is recorded.

Venom

The venom of this species is comprised of primarily of Long-Chain Neurotoxins (LCNs) and Phosopholipase-A2's (PLA2's). Effects are primarily pre-synaptic neurotoxic, with some cases of post-synaptic neurotoxic effects. Minor cytotoxic tissue damage is also reported as a minority effect.

Its venom is designed for quick paralysis of reptilian targets. In humans, it can cause respiratory distress, loss of motor skills and use of extremities, and nerve damage if left untreated.

description

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