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Barbados: Worlds Smallest Snake Discovered on Sat Aug 16, 2008 7:42 am
From: Live Science – August 03, 2008
A new species of snake has been found in a Barbados forest. This is now the world's smallest snake. Blair Hedges, a US-based evolutionary biologist, found the snake, which is just under four inches (10 cm) in length as an adult, in a fragment of forest on the eastern side of Barbados. Hedges analyzed genetic material from the snake, which along with physical characteristics such as its unique colour patterns and scales, provided evidence that the snake was indeed a new species of threadsnake, now dubbed Leptotyphlops carlae.
"Snakes may be prevented by natural selection from becoming too small because, below a certain size, there may be nothing for their young to eat," Hedges said. The Barbados snake, like other threadsnakes, is likely to feed primarily on the larvae of ants and termites.

Read Full Article: http://www.livescience.com/animals/080803-tiny-snake.html
Related posts:
> http://www.its2hot.in/viewtopic.php?f=43&t=537
> http://www.theenvironmentsite.org/forum/wildlife-biodiversity-forum/13178-barbados-worlds-smallest-snake-discovered.html
> http://www.caribbeannetnews.com/cgi-bin/mwf/topic_show.pl?tid=8531
> http://www.indianpad.com/general_science/310929
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A new species of snake has been found in a Barbados forest. This is now the world's smallest snake. Blair Hedges, a US-based evolutionary biologist, found the snake, which is just under four inches (10 cm) in length as an adult, in a fragment of forest on the eastern side of Barbados. Hedges analyzed genetic material from the snake, which along with physical characteristics such as its unique colour patterns and scales, provided evidence that the snake was indeed a new species of threadsnake, now dubbed Leptotyphlops carlae.
"Snakes may be prevented by natural selection from becoming too small because, below a certain size, there may be nothing for their young to eat," Hedges said. The Barbados snake, like other threadsnakes, is likely to feed primarily on the larvae of ants and termites.

Read Full Article: http://www.livescience.com/animals/080803-tiny-snake.html
Related posts:
> http://www.its2hot.in/viewtopic.php?f=43&t=537
> http://www.theenvironmentsite.org/forum/wildlife-biodiversity-forum/13178-barbados-worlds-smallest-snake-discovered.html
> http://www.caribbeannetnews.com/cgi-bin/mwf/topic_show.pl?tid=8531
> http://www.indianpad.com/general_science/310929
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