SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.5 número4Nuevo registro de presa en la dieta de la serpiente de pantano de vientre naranja Tretanorhinus nigroluteus Cope, 1861 (Dipsadidae) en la Selva Lacandona, Chiapas, MéxicoPrimer registro de depredación de Erythrolamprus sagittifer (Squamata: Dipsadidae) por Geranoaetus albicaudatus (Accipitriformes: Accipitridae) en la Provincia de Neuquén, Argentina índice de autoresíndice de materiabúsqueda de artículos
Home Pagelista alfabética de revistas  

Servicios Personalizados

Revista

Articulo

Indicadores

Links relacionados

  • No hay artículos similaresSimilares en SciELO

Compartir


Revista latinoamericana de herpetología

versión On-line ISSN 2594-2158

Rev. latinoam. herpetol. vol.5 no.4 Ciudad de México oct./dic. 2022  Epub 26-Jun-2023

https://doi.org/10.22201/fc.25942158e.2022.4.467 

Scientific notes

Milvago chimachima (Falconidae) First Known Predator of the Snake Enulius flavitorques (Colubridae)

Milvago chimachima (Falconidae) primer depredador conocido de la serpiente Enulius flavitorques (Colubridae)

Rogemif Fuentes1  2  * 

Helio Quintero-Arrieta1 

1Fundación Los Naturalistas, P.O. Box 0426-01459. David, Chiriquí, Panamá.

2Departamento de Zoología, Universidad de Panamá, Panamá.


Abstract

We expand the diet diversity of Milvago chimachima and report for the first time a predator of Enulius flavitorques.

Key words: Fossorial; opportunist; predator; prey

Resumen

Ampliamos el rango alimenticio de Milvago chimachima y reportamos por primera vez un depredador para Enulius flavitorques.

Palabras claves: Fosorial; oportunista; depredador; presa

Milvago chimachima (Vieillot, 1816), known in Panama as pollero hawk or common caracara, belongs to the Falconidae family, has a wide geographic distribution, from the south of Costa Rica to the north of Argentina and Uruguay (Del Hoyo et al., 1994; Rodríguez Mata et al., 2006). It is considered an omnivorous and opportunistic species, and its diet can include carrion, live prey, ticks from farm or wild animals, termites, and even some seeds (Hilty & Brown, 1986; Sazima, 2007; Motta-Junior et al., 2010; De La Ossa et al., 2018; Gálvez, 2019; Gijsman & Guevara, 2020).

Enulius flavitorques (Cope, 1868) is a fossorial snake distributed throughout the Pacific slope from Jalisco, Mexico, to Panama, and on the Atlantic slope from Chiapas, Mexico, to Honduras, and from Costa Rica and central Panama to Colombia and towards the northwest of Venezuela in elevations 0-1300 m a.s.l. (Savage, 2002; Solórzano, 2004; Natera-Mumaw et al., 2015). Due to its fossorial habits and secretive life, little is known about its biology, and its predators are still unknown, despite its wide distribution.

On January 8, 2022, at 11:50 h, during the activities of clearing, rescue, and relocation of the wildlife of the Bordada Cucaracha project in Panama (9.039°N, -79.639°W; WGS84; elevation 136 m a.s.l.) we observed a common caracara (M. chimachima) perched on a tree on the edge of the area. While photographing, the bird dived to capture a snake scared off by the machinery (Figure 1). Upon noticing our presence, the bird withdrew to a log approximately 15 m away, leaving the prey in place, which allowed us to identify it as a Colombian long-tailed snake (E. flavitorques). Then, we moved about 20 m away from the prey, and the bird returned to continue feeding. This process lasted about 15 minutes, and the consumption started by the head and continued by ingesting the rest of the body in chunks (Figure 1).

Figure 1 (A) Milvago chimachima perched on a trunk with Enulius flavitorques in beak, (B) the raptor begins to accommodate the prey, (C) the bird holds the snake with its left leg and starts feeding, (D) the snake is torn to be ingested.  

Figura 1 (A) Milvago chimachima se posa en un tronco con Enulius flavitorques en el pico, (B) la rapaz comienza a acomodar la presa, (C) el ave sujeta la serpiente con su pata izquierda y comienza a alimentarse, (D) la serpiente es desgarrada para ser ingerida.  

The predator-prey relationship generally conditioned the habits and habitats of both species (Smith et al., 2019). However, there are opportunistic predators such as M. chimachima that are adapted to colonize different types of habitats and feed on different kinds of prey, varying their diet widely (Hilty & Brown, 1986; Sazima, 2007; Motta-Junior et al., 2010; De La Ossa et al., 2018; Gálvez, 2019; Gijsman & Guevara, 2020). Despite this, it is the first time this species is reported to consume the fossorial snake E. flavitorques for which very little is known, making this bird the first known predator.

It has been proposed, for other semi-fossorial snakes such as the genus Urotheca, that the long tail of E. flavitorques is the result of high predation pressure (Savage & Crother, 1989; McCranie & Villa, 1993), as many of the specimens found lack part of fossorial snakes, but the absence of reports does not allow us the tail (Savage & Crother, 1989). Due to the habits/habitat to corroborate the latter. This lack of information on predation of E. flavitorques (Savage, 2002), we propose that this snake upon E. flavitorques may result from its cryptic habits that make may be a prey of caecilians or even of other fossorial or semi- it difficult to witness.

The circumstances under which the event was observed allowed it to be recorded, and potentially occurring frequently, but further sampling effort is required.

Acknowledgments

To the Panama Canal Authority (ACP), the company RETRANEQ and Global Trends Inc., for authorizing us to use this data for this scientific contribution.

Cited literature

ÁDe La Ossa, J., D.M. Vergara & A. Perez-Cordero. 2018. Population abundance and feeding annotations for Milvago chimachima (Aves: Falconidae) in Santiago De Tolu, Sucre, Colombia. Indian Journal of Science and Technology 11:1-5. [ Links ]

Del Hoyo, J., A. Elliott & J. Sargatal. 1994. Handbook of the Birds of the World. New World Vultures to Guineafowl. Lynx editions, Barcelona, España. [ Links ]

Gálvez, D. 2019. Predation of a Rock Pigeon by a Yellow-Headed Caracara in a suburban area in Panama. Journal of Raptor Research 53:109-110. [ Links ]

Gijsman, F. & M. Guevara. 2020. Yellow-Headed Caracara as a cleaner of white-tailed deer in an urban park. Journal of Raptor Research 54:319-321. [ Links ]

Hilty, S.L. & W.L. Brown. 1986. A Guide to the Birds of Colombia. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, USA. [ Links ]

McCranie, J.R. & J. Villa. 1993. A new genus for the snake Enulius sclateri (Colubridae: Xenodontinae). Amphibia-Reptilia 14:261-267. [ Links ]

Motta-Junior, J.C., M.A.M. Granzinolli & A.R. Monteiro. 2010. Miscellaneous ecological notes on Brazilian birds of prey and owls. Biota Neotropica 10:255-259. [ Links ]

Natera-Mumaw, M., L.F. Esqueda-González & M. Castelaín-Fernández. 2015. Atlas Serpientes de Venezuela. Dimacofi Negocios Avanzados S.A., Santiago de Chile. Chile [ Links ]

Rodríguez Mata, J., F. Erize & M. Rumboll. 2006. Aves de Sudamérica - Guía de campo Collins. 1st ed. Letemendia, Argentina. [ Links ]

Savage, J.M. 2002. The Amphibians and Reptiles of Costa Rica: a Herpetofauna Between Two Continents, Between Two Seas. University of Chicago press, Chicago, Illinois, USA. [ Links ]

Savage, J.M. & B.I. Crother. 1989. The status of Pliocercus and Urotheca (Serpentes: Colubridae), with a review of included species of coral snake mimics. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 95:335-362. [ Links ]

Sazima, I. 2007. Unexpected cleaners: Black vultures (Coragyps atratus) remove debris, ticks and peck at sores of capybaras (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris), with an overview of tick removing birds in Brazil. Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia 15:417-26. [ Links ]

Smith, J.A., E. Donadio, J.N. Pauli, M.J. Sheriff, O.R. Bidder & A.R. Middleton. 2019. Habitat complexity mediates the predator-prey space race. Ecology 100:02724. [ Links ]

Solórzano, A. 2004. Serpientes de Costa Rica: Distribución, Taxonomía e Historia Natural. Editorial INBio, Costa Rica. [ Links ]

Received: May 15, 2022; Accepted: October 14, 2022; Published: November 04, 2022

*Correspondence: rogemifdaniel@gmail.com

Editor: Uri Omar García Vázquez, México.

Creative Commons License This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License