192 



SNAKES. 



there are several shields on the same region of the head, while the number of rows 

 of shields beneath the tail is only from twenty to forty-one. The best known re- 

 presentative of the genus is the common boa, or boa-constrictor (B. constrictor), 

 which ranges in South America from Venezuela to upper Argentina. At times 

 reaching as much as 12 feet in length, it has the muzzle slightly prominent in the 

 adult, although obliquely truncated in the immature state. In general colour it is 

 pale brown on the upper-parts, with from fifteen to twenty dark brown crossbars, 

 which expand inferiorly, sometimes to such an extent as to become connected on 



common boa (| nat. size). 



the sides of the body, and thus to surround oval or elliptical spots of the light ground- 

 colour ; the expanded portion of each bar having a light longitudinal line. On the 

 sides are a series of large light-centred dark brown spots, most of which alternate 

 with the crossbars.; and on the tail all the markings become relatively larger, of a 

 brick-red colour, margined with black, and separated by yellowish intervals. From • 

 the muzzle to the nape runs a dark brown median streak, widening posteriorly, where 

 it may be looped ; another bar of the same colour passes on each side of the head 

 through the eye, while there is a third below the latter, and the lips are marked 

 by such bars ; the rostral shield of the snout being also ornamented with a crescentic 

 blackish mark. The under-parts are yellowish, with spots and dots, or merely dots, 

 of black. The whole tone of coloration is dull, sombre, and adapted to harmonise 

 with the shades of brown, black, and yellow on the bark* of tropical forest trees. 



