Melaka Butterfly and Reptile Sanctuary successfully breeds yellow anacondas

16 Jun 2023 12:11pm
Head of the Snake and Crocodile Division Athira Faiqah Md Wahi showing a baby yellow anaconda at the Malacca Butterfly and Reptile Sanctuary recently.
Head of the Snake and Crocodile Division Athira Faiqah Md Wahi showing a baby yellow anaconda at the Malacca Butterfly and Reptile Sanctuary recently.
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MELAKA - Melaka Butterfly and Reptile Sanctuary has successfully bred the yellow anacondas or Eunectus notaeus after trying for more than 13 years.

Its manager Qurratu A'in Rohaminordin said the conservation centre welcomed 14 snakelets on June 5.

"Yellow anacondas may form breeding balls, consisting of one female and multiple males. The males compete for the female, and the strongest and largest male will breed with the females.

"But we only have one female and one male anaconda here, so we have to control the optimum temperature between 33 and 42 degrees Celsius during the gestation period," she told Bernama when contacted.

She said the two yellow anacondas mate for the first time on March 25, 2022 despite the usual period between September and December every year.

"The female yellow anaconda showed signs of being pregnant at the beginning of January when it started refusing food and gaining weight. It was also often seen sunbathing under the lights provided, so we maintained a warm temperature to suit the reptile's condition.

"The zoologist who monitored the development of the female anaconda reported that it had increased in size and we decided to close the enclosure to ensure that it does not feel threatened and remove the male anaconda from the enclosure to prevent the female from being disturbed,” she said.

The ovoviviparous reptile develops eggs inside their body and give birth to an already hatched young.

"This means they give birth to live young after developing and retaining the eggs inside their bodies,” she said.

She added that the baby yellow anacondas, about 0.6 metres long and weigh around 170 grammes, were already independent at birth and did not hesitate to bite when threatened, and could swim well.

"All of these yellow anaconda snakelets will be on display for public viewing when the time is appropriate and when their condition has stabilised under the care of the zoologists at the conservation centre.

"Although the yellow anaconda is not a local snake species, the reptile breeding and conservation efforts carried out by Malaysian zoologists prove that they are world class and on par with their foreign counterparts,” she said. - BERNAMA

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