American Herping:
A Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians in US Zoos
In the past 5 years, the forum has amassed a wealth of information on what mammals and birds are held by zoos around the United States – a real accomplishment. Unfortunately (with the exception of crocodilians) no such project has been undertaken for herps. This isn’t surprising – they are one of the more difficult groups to document for a number of reasons, and they receive less attention on the forum than mammals or birds (although this has been improving in the past couple years). With rising interest, I decided - as a herp fan myself - to do some research and see what all kinds of reptile and amphibian are around. Using public information such as the forum and zoo websites, I constructed a survey of reptile and amphibian species displayed across 137 zoos and aquariums in the United States.
I spent a good amount of time trying to decide what the best way to share this data with all of you was. After considering several options, I settled on this: why not use the survey data to create a reptile and amphibian zoo guide for American ZooChatters? There seems to be constant confusion on the forum as to what herps are around, and how easy or difficult it is to find them; having a guide for ID help and species searching could go a long way. So that’s what I intend this thread to be: a general guide to exploring the reptiles and amphibians held in American captive collections.
...
I’ll have an entire post explaining the methodology of the survey tomorrow, so right now I’ll explain how the format of the guide will look. I’ll be going in roughly taxonomic order, giving some information about groups and species as I go. I will include information like relative abundance, identifying features, behavior and ecology, comparisons with other zoo regions, and what types of zoos they tend to be in. I will also include media in every post so that people can have a good sense of what many of these species typically look like. While some photos will be from other countries as needed, most will be from collections in the United States to showcase our ectotherm diversity.
The relative abundance (how common or rare a species or group is) will be based mainly on the numerical results of the survey. For some species I also conducted a “missing data” test (this will be explained in the methodology post) which changes the results for a handful of noted species. All species found were sorted into the following bins:
Abundant: 40+ holders
Very Common: 30-39 holders
Common: 20-29 holders
Prevalent: 10-19 holders
Uncommon: 5-9 holders
Rare: 1-4 holders
The majority of species fall into the Rare category, but these make up a small fraction of the overall holdings: 60% of species qualify as Rare, but they only make up 1 out of every 6 herp holdings. In order to keep this as a single reasonable thread, most of these rarely-seen species won't get featured or discussed individually. However, at the end of each post for a group I will include a list of all the related species found in the survey that didn’t themselves get covered – so you’ll know every single one I found.
My plan for this week is to share the survey methodology tomorrow, then share the first content posts a day or two after that. From next week on I’ll try to do 2-4 content posts a week. Some will be shorter or longer, but I’ve tried to keep them all a reasonably short length for quick reading. I’m hoping to get some good discussion too, so don’t feel any need to hold back questions or comments as I go!
Boyd's Forest Dragon at Los Angeles Zoo (pc @Julio C Castro)
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Survey and Methodology:
Survey & Methodology
Amphibians
Giant Salamanders
Lungless Salamanders
Mole Salamanders
True Newts & Salamanders (2 posts)
Amphiumas, Sirens & Mudpuppies
Poison Dart Frogs Part I, Part II, and Part III
Mantellas
Horned Frogs
Clawed Frogs
Native Tree Frogs
Neotropical Tree Frogs (2 posts)
Australian Tree Frogs
Rhacophoridae
True Frogs (Ranidae) & African Bullfrog
Native Toads
Exotic Toads (2 posts)
Fire-bellied Toads & Spadefoot Toads
Miscellaneous Tiny Frogs
Other Miscellaneous Frogs (2 posts)
Lost Frogs and Extinct Frogs
Caecilians
Amphibian Recap
Tuataras & Lizards
Tuatara
Legless & Alligator Lizards
Beaded Lizards
Agamids (2 posts)
Chameleons
Anoles
Basilisks
Collared & Leopard Lizards
Horned & Spiny Lizards
Green Iguana & Caribbean Iguanas
Fijian Iguanas & Spiny-tailed Iguanas
Desert Iguana & Chuckwallas
Common Tree Geckos (Gekkonidae)
Day Geckos
Leaf-tailed Geckos
Ground Geckos
Other Geckos
Girdled Lizards (Cordylidae)
Plated & Girdled Lizards (Gerrhosauridae)
Skinks (2 posts)
Tegus & Whiptails
Tree Monitors
African Monitors & Water Monitors
Other Monitors
Miscellaneous Lizards (2 posts)
Lizard Recap
Snakes
Neotropical Tree Boas (Chilabothrus & Corallus)
Boa Constrictors, Rainbow Boas & Anacondas
Desert Boas
Malagasy Boas
African Pythons
Large Asian Pythons
Carpet & Green Tree Pythons
Other Pythons
Kingsnakes
North American Ratsnakes
Pine, Gopher & Indigo Snakes
Garter & Water Snakes
Other Native Colubrids
Exotic Colubrids Part I and Part II
Cobras
King Cobra & Mambas
Australian Elapids
Other Elapids
African Adders (Bitis)
Other Pitless Vipers (Viperinae)
Copperheads, Cottonmouths & Cantils
Neotropical Ground Pitvipers
Tree Pitvipers
Asian Ground Pitvipers
Native Rattlesnakes (4 posts)
Exotic Rattlesnakes
Miscellaneous Snakes
Snake Recap
Turtles and Tortoises
African Side-necked Turtles
Australian Side-necked Turtles (2 posts)
South American Side-necked Turtles (Chelidae)
South American & Malagasy Side-necked Turtles (Podocnemididae)
Softshell Turtles & Fly River Turtle
Sea Turtles
American Snapping Turtles
American Mud & Musk Turtles + Miscellaneous Turtles
American Box Turtles
Painted Turtles, Cooters & Sliders
Map Turtles & Other American Freshwater Turtles (2 posts)
Asian Box Turtles & Neotropical Wood Turtles
Asian Freshwater Turtles (Geoemydidae (3 posts)
Mediterranean Tortoises (Testudo)
African Tortoises
Malagasy Tortoises
Asian Tortoises
North American Tortoises
Neotropical & Giant Tortoises
Turtle Recap
Crocodilians
Alligators
Caimans
Crocodiles from the Americas
African Crocodiles
Asian & Australian Crocodiles
Gharials
Crocodilian Recap
Guide Summary and Conclusion:
Guide Summary and Conclusion
A Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians in US Zoos
In the past 5 years, the forum has amassed a wealth of information on what mammals and birds are held by zoos around the United States – a real accomplishment. Unfortunately (with the exception of crocodilians) no such project has been undertaken for herps. This isn’t surprising – they are one of the more difficult groups to document for a number of reasons, and they receive less attention on the forum than mammals or birds (although this has been improving in the past couple years). With rising interest, I decided - as a herp fan myself - to do some research and see what all kinds of reptile and amphibian are around. Using public information such as the forum and zoo websites, I constructed a survey of reptile and amphibian species displayed across 137 zoos and aquariums in the United States.
I spent a good amount of time trying to decide what the best way to share this data with all of you was. After considering several options, I settled on this: why not use the survey data to create a reptile and amphibian zoo guide for American ZooChatters? There seems to be constant confusion on the forum as to what herps are around, and how easy or difficult it is to find them; having a guide for ID help and species searching could go a long way. So that’s what I intend this thread to be: a general guide to exploring the reptiles and amphibians held in American captive collections.
...
I’ll have an entire post explaining the methodology of the survey tomorrow, so right now I’ll explain how the format of the guide will look. I’ll be going in roughly taxonomic order, giving some information about groups and species as I go. I will include information like relative abundance, identifying features, behavior and ecology, comparisons with other zoo regions, and what types of zoos they tend to be in. I will also include media in every post so that people can have a good sense of what many of these species typically look like. While some photos will be from other countries as needed, most will be from collections in the United States to showcase our ectotherm diversity.
The relative abundance (how common or rare a species or group is) will be based mainly on the numerical results of the survey. For some species I also conducted a “missing data” test (this will be explained in the methodology post) which changes the results for a handful of noted species. All species found were sorted into the following bins:
Abundant: 40+ holders
Very Common: 30-39 holders
Common: 20-29 holders
Prevalent: 10-19 holders
Uncommon: 5-9 holders
Rare: 1-4 holders
The majority of species fall into the Rare category, but these make up a small fraction of the overall holdings: 60% of species qualify as Rare, but they only make up 1 out of every 6 herp holdings. In order to keep this as a single reasonable thread, most of these rarely-seen species won't get featured or discussed individually. However, at the end of each post for a group I will include a list of all the related species found in the survey that didn’t themselves get covered – so you’ll know every single one I found.
My plan for this week is to share the survey methodology tomorrow, then share the first content posts a day or two after that. From next week on I’ll try to do 2-4 content posts a week. Some will be shorter or longer, but I’ve tried to keep them all a reasonably short length for quick reading. I’m hoping to get some good discussion too, so don’t feel any need to hold back questions or comments as I go!
Boyd's Forest Dragon at Los Angeles Zoo (pc @Julio C Castro)
---
Guide Table of Contents:
Survey and Methodology:
Survey & Methodology
Amphibians
Giant Salamanders
Lungless Salamanders
Mole Salamanders
True Newts & Salamanders (2 posts)
Amphiumas, Sirens & Mudpuppies
Poison Dart Frogs Part I, Part II, and Part III
Mantellas
Horned Frogs
Clawed Frogs
Native Tree Frogs
Neotropical Tree Frogs (2 posts)
Australian Tree Frogs
Rhacophoridae
True Frogs (Ranidae) & African Bullfrog
Native Toads
Exotic Toads (2 posts)
Fire-bellied Toads & Spadefoot Toads
Miscellaneous Tiny Frogs
Other Miscellaneous Frogs (2 posts)
Lost Frogs and Extinct Frogs
Caecilians
Amphibian Recap
Tuataras & Lizards
Tuatara
Legless & Alligator Lizards
Beaded Lizards
Agamids (2 posts)
Chameleons
Anoles
Basilisks
Collared & Leopard Lizards
Horned & Spiny Lizards
Green Iguana & Caribbean Iguanas
Fijian Iguanas & Spiny-tailed Iguanas
Desert Iguana & Chuckwallas
Common Tree Geckos (Gekkonidae)
Day Geckos
Leaf-tailed Geckos
Ground Geckos
Other Geckos
Girdled Lizards (Cordylidae)
Plated & Girdled Lizards (Gerrhosauridae)
Skinks (2 posts)
Tegus & Whiptails
Tree Monitors
African Monitors & Water Monitors
Other Monitors
Miscellaneous Lizards (2 posts)
Lizard Recap
Snakes
Neotropical Tree Boas (Chilabothrus & Corallus)
Boa Constrictors, Rainbow Boas & Anacondas
Desert Boas
Malagasy Boas
African Pythons
Large Asian Pythons
Carpet & Green Tree Pythons
Other Pythons
Kingsnakes
North American Ratsnakes
Pine, Gopher & Indigo Snakes
Garter & Water Snakes
Other Native Colubrids
Exotic Colubrids Part I and Part II
Cobras
King Cobra & Mambas
Australian Elapids
Other Elapids
African Adders (Bitis)
Other Pitless Vipers (Viperinae)
Copperheads, Cottonmouths & Cantils
Neotropical Ground Pitvipers
Tree Pitvipers
Asian Ground Pitvipers
Native Rattlesnakes (4 posts)
Exotic Rattlesnakes
Miscellaneous Snakes
Snake Recap
Turtles and Tortoises
African Side-necked Turtles
Australian Side-necked Turtles (2 posts)
South American Side-necked Turtles (Chelidae)
South American & Malagasy Side-necked Turtles (Podocnemididae)
Softshell Turtles & Fly River Turtle
Sea Turtles
American Snapping Turtles
American Mud & Musk Turtles + Miscellaneous Turtles
American Box Turtles
Painted Turtles, Cooters & Sliders
Map Turtles & Other American Freshwater Turtles (2 posts)
Asian Box Turtles & Neotropical Wood Turtles
Asian Freshwater Turtles (Geoemydidae (3 posts)
Mediterranean Tortoises (Testudo)
African Tortoises
Malagasy Tortoises
Asian Tortoises
North American Tortoises
Neotropical & Giant Tortoises
Turtle Recap
Crocodilians
Alligators
Caimans
Crocodiles from the Americas
African Crocodiles
Asian & Australian Crocodiles
Gharials
Crocodilian Recap
Guide Summary and Conclusion:
Guide Summary and Conclusion
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