Sock Puppet
Very Well-Known Member
I was just browsing the threatened species list on the DECCW website, & was reading the summary for the woma python in NSW, refer link & text below, in particular the last bullet point.
DEC | NSW threatened species - Woma
Has anyone witnessed a woma caudal luring in an ambush position? Even better if you've got a video of it.
The last point also has a curious comment about them foraging in trees? Interesting for a terrestrial species, has anyone actually seen this? (fallen trees don't count...)
DEC | NSW threatened species - Woma
Now I have often seen my womas wagging/wiggling their tails at feeding time, however I'd hardly call it caudal luring as an adder or GTP would do it. It's more like the excited wagging a knob tail gecko does at feeding time in my opinion. They aren't looking to ambush anything, they are actively moving around looking for the source of the smell of food.Habitat and ecology
- Terrestrial, inhabiting subtropical to temperate deserts and sandy plains, as well as dunefields and deep cracking black soil plains in semi-arid areas.
- Occurs in hummock grasslands, shrublands or woodlands and shelters in animal burrows, hollow logs or under grass hummocks.
- Feeds at night on lizards, snakes, birds and small mammals, which it captures using a range of strategies; known to rely on ambush predation in a manner similar to death adders (Acanthophis spp.) by using its tail to lure prey; also actively forages on the ground, in animal burrows and in trees.
Has anyone witnessed a woma caudal luring in an ambush position? Even better if you've got a video of it.
The last point also has a curious comment about them foraging in trees? Interesting for a terrestrial species, has anyone actually seen this? (fallen trees don't count...)
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