YES, this is not a green Mamba. Professor Bill Branch weighed in, he and I worked together on Mozambique's Mount Mabu, and he is well regarded as one as a great snake expert and the author of books about Southern Africa's reptiles. He told me the following:
Dear Jeff
I’m afraid the snake is not a green mamba – two reasons – green mambas only eat warm-blooded prey (birds and mammals) and the eye is too large – it is a male boomslang.
It is a little tough to stand still with the appropriate reference work looking at the diagrams in an informative fashion while the 1,5 m Prince, formally known as a Mamba eats your flycatchers and frogs. If you can make a definitive identification I would appreciate it, in return I will happily identify your trees....
I am suprised, since the person who verified it is a naturalist who lives in the area. However, I will connect with a friend who is southern Africa's most respected reptile expert and get back to you.
I don´t know the exact species, but this is NOT a mamba, or an elapid whatsoever... it is a colubrid, perhaps a boomslang, but I am not entirely sure of that
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patrickbatista0022 2 months ago
1:16 OI! rofl
fadalisdestroyer666 2 months ago
this is the best green mamba vid iv ever seen
jjmodglin 3 months ago
nice i love snakes
25thesnake 3 months ago
HI Allan and rattling to the end.
YES, this is not a green Mamba. Professor Bill Branch weighed in, he and I worked together on Mozambique's Mount Mabu, and he is well regarded as one as a great snake expert and the author of books about Southern Africa's reptiles. He told me the following:
Dear Jeff
I’m afraid the snake is not a green mamba – two reasons – green mambas only eat warm-blooded prey (birds and mammals) and the eye is too large – it is a male boomslang.
Thanks! Jeff
jefftube4view 3 months ago
@jefftube4view I knew that was no mamba!!! :D also, they all have coffin like heads.
rattlingtotheend 2 months ago
Jeff, Rattling and Dragonfly,
It is a little tough to stand still with the appropriate reference work looking at the diagrams in an informative fashion while the 1,5 m Prince, formally known as a Mamba eats your flycatchers and frogs. If you can make a definitive identification I would appreciate it, in return I will happily identify your trees....
Allan
allanschwarz1 3 months ago
Hey rattling,
I am suprised, since the person who verified it is a naturalist who lives in the area. However, I will connect with a friend who is southern Africa's most respected reptile expert and get back to you.
Jeff
jefftube4view 4 months ago
I don´t know the exact species, but this is NOT a mamba, or an elapid whatsoever... it is a colubrid, perhaps a boomslang, but I am not entirely sure of that
rattlingtotheend 4 months ago
In the garden of Eden baby..
Dhragonfly 5 months ago