Honoring activist Cacuango in the naming of the species is also important, she said, since Indigenous peoples play a key role in conservation. “I am always happy when I see a new species of snake being introduced to the world,” Guedes said. Thaís Guedes, a researcher at the State University of Campinas in Brazil who was not involved with the study, praised the work. “So while it still needs to be formally evaluated by the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature), I think it might be threatened with extinction.” “It has a fairly small range,” Entiauspe-Neto said. However, dwarf boas face far bigger threats than predators: The newly identified species may already be endangered due to habitat loss. 'Indigenous people have the knowledge': Conservation biologist Erika Cuéllar on restoring the planet RAE12EC_01-156R ¦ ©Rolex Awards/Thierry Grobet Courtesy Rolex Awards/Thierry Grobet THE ROLEX AWARDS FOR ENTERPRISE, ERIKA CUÉLLAR, BOLIVIA, 2012 LAUREATEĮrika Cuéllar (pictured) believes that it is impossible to conserve the Gran Chaco without involving local communities. If a predator such as an eagle sees a dwarf boa coiled up and bleeding from its eyes, “the predator is very likely to think that the snake might be either sick or dying, so therefore it will not feed on it” to avoid catching whatever made the snake seem ill. “Most predators tend to feed on living prey,” he said. This behavior, also seen in horned lizards, might appear more gross than threatening, but Entiauspe-Neto suspects the behavior is part of a bigger constellation of death feigning found throughout the animal kingdom. And since they don’t have size on their side like true boa constrictors, dwarf boas have evolved a strange defense mechanism: When threatened, they curl into a ball and bleed out of their eyes. While 10-foot-long boa constrictors go after animals as big as wild pigs, dwarf boas have diets that largely consist of small lizards. Snakes had back legs for 70 million years before losing them, new fossil shows Sauropods dinosaurs walk through the desert at the back. The snake is coiled around with its hindlimbs on top of the remains of a jaw bone from a small charcharodontosaurid dinosaur while another theropod is reflected in its eye. Life restoration of Najash rionegrina through the dunes of the landscape of the Kokorkom desert that extended across Ro Negro (Northern Patagonia), Argentina during the Late Cretaceous (100 million years ago).
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