Furcifer verrucosus discovered in the stomach of a snake
Biologists from the University of Michigan (USA) recently made a curious discovery: they analysed a snake of the species Langaha madagascariensis that had been prepared 31 years ago using dissection and microCT. The specimen had been largely untouched in the Zoological Museum of the University of Michigan since 1994. The snake was originally collected by R.A. Nussbaum in the extreme south of Madagascar, not far from Tolagnaro. Little is known about the diet of the leaf-nosed snake, only anecdotal case reports are known. Chameleons have now been added to the list of potential prey: An adult Furcifer verrucosus was found in the stomach of the female leaf-nosed snake examined.
Natural history notes: Langaha madagascariensis (Malagasy leaf-nosed snake)
Andressa L. Viol, Hayley L. Crowell, Justin L. Lee, Tristan D. Schramer
Herpetological Review 55 (2), 2025: 223-226.
DOI: not available
Photo: Furcifer verrucosus, photographed by Nick Newberry, CC BY 4.0
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