Home • ReadSpeaker • Formula 4 • Rivista English4Life • I buoni acquisti • Daisy Stories
Arranger Stories
• Il Blog di Daisy • Grammatica • Studia l'inglese con noi
Risorse sfiziose • Testi paralleli (Wikipedia) • Testi paralleli (altri) • The West Family
Classici in inglese
• Wikibooks •
Corso di base + schede lessicali • Metodo Casiraghi-Jones • Come studiare • Tips • Risposte • Articoli in italiano • Enciclopedia

  IMPARA L'INGLESE CON BABYLON!
Come servizio al nostro pubblico, riportiamo qui a sinistra il box di traduzione di Babylon
. Se c'θ una parola inglese che non capisci, digitala nella casella Traduci... , clicca su GO e subito si aprirΰ una finestra con la traduzione italiana. Per una maggiore comoditΰ e completezza, puoi scaricare qui gratuitamente per un mese Babylon Pro, lo strumento in assoluto piω utile per chi vuole imparare l'inglese. Da oggi anche con il traduttore di frasi inglesi incorporato!
 
 
 
AVAILABLE
WIKIBOOKS

•••••••••••

 AVAILABLE
WIKIBOOKS

•••••••••••


CONTENTS

  1. Alligator
  2. Alpaca
  3. Anaconda
  4. Ant
  5. Anteater
  6. Antelope
  7. Baboon
  8. Badger
  9. Bat
  10. Bear
  11. Bee
  12. Boa
  13. Butterfly
  14. Camel
  15. Canary
  16. Cat
  17. Cheeta
  18. Chicken
  19. Chimpanzee
  20. Cobra
  21. Cod
  22. Condor
  23. Cormorant
  24. Cow
  25. Crab
  26. Cricket
  27. Crocodile
  28. Crow
  29. Deer
  30. Dog
  31. Dolphin
  32. Donkey
  33. Dove
  34. Duck
  35. Eagle
  36. Elephant
  37. Emu
  38. Falcon
  39. Ferret
  40. Fly
  41. Fox
  42. Gazelle
  43. Giraffe
  44. Goat
  45. Goose
  46. Gorilla
  47. Hare
  48. Hedgehog
  49. Heron
  50. Hippopotamus
  51. Horse
  52. Hyena
  53. Ibis
  54. Jackal
  55. Kangaroo
  56. Kingfisher
  57. Koala
  58. Leopard
  59. Lion
  60. Llama
  61. Lobster
  62. Louse
  63. Mantodea
  64. Mink
  65. Mole
  66. Mongoose
  67. Mosquito
  68. Mule
  69. Nightingale
  70. Octopus
  71. Opossum
  72. Orangutan
  73. Ostrich
  74. Otter
  75. Owl
  76. Panda
  77. Parrot
  78. Partridge
  79. Peacock (Peafowl)
  80. Pelican
  81. Penguin
  82. Pheasant
  83. Pig
  84. Pigeon
  85. Prawn
  86. Puffin
  87. Quail
  88. Rabbit
  89. Reindeer
  90. Rhinoceros
  91. Salmon
  92. Seagull
  93. Seal
  94. Shark
  95. Sheep
  96. Shrimp
  97. Silk worm
  98. Skunk
  99. Sparrow
  100. Spider
  101. Squid
  102. Squirrel
  103. Stork
  104. Swallow
  105. Swan
  106. Tarantula
  107. Termite
  108. Tiger
  109. Toucan
  110. Tuna
  111. Turkey
  112. Turtle
  113. Violet-ear
  114. Vulture
  115. Walrus
  116. Wasp
  117. Whale
  118. Wolf
  119. Woodpecker
  120. Yak
  121. Zebra
 



ANIMALS
This article is from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boa

All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License 

Boa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Contents

  • 1 Boidae
  • 2 Erycinae
  • 3 See also
  • 4 External links
?Boidae
Red-tailed Boa, Boa constrictor
 
Red-tailed Boa, Boa constrictor
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
 
Phylum: Chordata
 
Class: Reptilia
 
Order: Squamata
 
Suborder: Serpentes
 
Family: Boidae
Gray, 1825
Genera
  • Acrantophis
  • Boa
  • Candoia
  • Corallus
  • Epicrates
  • Eryx
  • Eunectes
  • Gongylophis
  • Sanzinia


Boas are a type of snake that are members of the Boidae family. Boas are basal snakes that are "primitive" in evolutionary terms (i.e. less derived). They are constrictors and most give birth to live young. They have anal spurs, a pair of claws on each side of the cloaca which assist in mating. Boas are named after cows (Latin: bos) because of the old myth that boa snakes pursue cows and suckle them until they are drained to death.

Boas have two subfamilies: Boinae or true boas and Erycinae or sand boas. Pythons are sometimes classified as a subfamily of Boidae, but are frequently listed under their own family, Pythonidae.

Boidae

True boas are medium sized to large snakes. Females are usually larger than their male counterparts. Boas contain many subspecies based on locaility. They include Colombian, Suriname, Bolivian, Peruvian, Hog Island, Long Tail Peruvian, Argentine and more. The boas from the amazon basin are the most colorful possessing bright cherry red tails. It used to be said that boas were New World Snakes and pythons were Old World Snakes, but, with boas found on Madagascar and the Solomon Islands, this is not quite true. Instead, it is possible that boas have survived in evolutionarily isolated areas. South America, until a few million years ago, had a distinct fauna that included marsupial mammals; with the land bridge to North America, boas have migrated north as placental mammals and colubrids (for example) have migrated south.

  • Acrantophis (Dumeril's Boa and Madagascar Ground Boa; sometimes equated with Boa)
  • Boa (Red-tailed Boa, Boa constrictor, and relatives)
  • Candoia (Pacific boas)
  • Charina(Rosy boas)
  • Corallus (Tree boas)
  • Epicrates (Rainbow boas and Island boas)
  • Eryx (Sand boas, Eryx johnii)
  • Eunectes (Anacondas)
  • Gongylophis (Gongylophis conicus)
  • Sanzinia (Madagascar Tree Boa; sometimes equated with Boa)
An Argentine Boa
Enlarge
An Argentine Boa
Cook's Tree Boa
Enlarge
Cook's Tree Boa


 

Erycinae

Compared to true boas, erycines are quite small, with most members of this subfamily remaining well under a metre in length. Fossil erycines have been found in rock strata over 50 million years old, and were once widespread in North America. Now, only two species remain in North America, as well as the sand boas in Africa, Asia and southeastern Europe.

At least three erycine species lay eggs: the Calabar Burrowing "Python" , Calabaria reinhardtii (once classified as a python for this reason); the Arabian Sand Boa, Eryx jayakari; and the West African Sand Boa, Eryx muelleri.

  • Calabaria reinhardtii (Calabar Burrowing "Python", Africa; sometimes equated with Charina)
  • Charina bottae (rubber boas, west coast of North America)
  • Eryx (Sand boa, Africa, western Asia and southeastern Europe)
  • Lichanura trivirgata (Rosy boa, southwestern U.S. and northwestern Mexico; sometimes equated with Charina)

See also

Photographs of the Belize fauna (5)

External links

  • Red-Tail Boa Frequently Asked Questions
  • General Information on Boas
  • The Sand Boa Page



 

Chordata - Reptilia - Squamata - Families of Snakes  
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boa"
AVAILABLE
WIKIBOOKS

•••••••••••


Translate Text
Original text: