4.4 Article

Composition and natural history of a snake community from the southern Cerrado, southeastern Brazil

Journal

ZOOKEYS
Volume -, Issue 1056, Pages 95-147

Publisher

PENSOFT PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1056.63733

Keywords

Behaviour; diet; habitat; reproduction; savanna; Serpentes

Categories

Funding

  1. Sao Paulo State Research Foundation (FAPESP) [2015/21259-8, 2018/140911, 2020/12658-4]
  2. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo (FAPESP) [20/12658-4] Funding Source: FAPESP

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The research describes the natural history of a Cerrado snake community in the SBES area in southeastern Brazil, finding that most species are active in non-forest vegetation types and primarily prey on lizards, mammals, and anurans. Many species use visually oriented defensive tactics.
The natural history of a cerrado snake community in a protected area in southeastern Brazil (Santa Barbara Ecological Station; SBES) is described. A visual guide and an identification key are also provided to assist researchers and local people in identifying snakes in that region. Sampling was performed through pitfall traps, time-constrained search, accidental encounters, and observations by local people for two years, which corresponded to 240 days of sampling. Among the 388 individuals found in the field, 33 snake species belonging to 21 genera of seven families were recorded. Most species were restricted or found at least once in non-forest vegetation types (campo sujo, campo cerrado, and cerrado sensu stricto) and a few were restricted to forest habitats (cerradio). Our results show that most species (1) occupy open areas; (2) present both diurnal and nocturnal activity; (3) are primarily terrestrial; (4) include lizards, mammals and/or anurans in the diet; (5) present seasonal reproductive activity; and (6) use mainly visually oriented defensive tactics. Despite its small size (3,154 ha), the SBES harbours preserved habitats and a rich and typical Cerrado snake fauna, including threatened species. Furthermore, most of the SBES snakes occur in non-forest environments (54%) and some species are sensitive to habitat disturbance.

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