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  1. Galleries
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  4. » Vipera aspis

 
Vipera aspis...

Fauna

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avatarsenior
sent on August 23, 2014 (11:33) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

the famous Vipera aspis morae arboreal:-D ... maybe a known chromaticity magenta ... hello;-)

avatarsupporter
sent on August 23, 2014 (11:36) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Thanks Moth-)

avatarsenior
sent on August 23, 2014 (15:34) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Great document. I see that it is situated on a bramble bush: at what height from the ground?
Hello Mauro

avatarsupporter
sent on August 23, 2014 (17:53) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Mauro It was a bit 'high. A knowledgeable friend of vipers and told me that 'quite unusual that they are raised from the ground. That morning was quite wet for moisture and perhaps felt the need to stay in a place as dry. However, it was about forty inches from the ground.
Hello
Michele-)

avatarsenior
sent on August 23, 2014 (18:07) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Normally September is rising on the highest branches to give birth to live young and drop the poison for her. It looks like the size of a pregnant female.

Hello

avatarsupporter
sent on August 23, 2014 (19:46) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Hello George, to be precise this viper I photographed fi at the end of June. I do not know the behavior of snakes so I can not explain why it was so high. Mysteries of nature;-)
Hello
Michele

avatarsenior
sent on August 23, 2014 (19:53) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

I did not know the time of shooting, I confirm all of what I have said for september. And 'abnormal see on a bramble, in the period you indicated should be hunting, to make stocks of fat for the winter.

Hello
Giorgio

avatarsupporter
sent on August 23, 2014 (21:36) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Great snap and document.

Greetings ale

avatarsupporter
sent on August 24, 2014 (13:34) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Thanks Ale-)

avatarsenior
sent on August 24, 2014 (14:01) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Normally September is rising on the highest branches to give birth to live young and drop the poison for her. It looks like the size of a pregnant female.
...........wow!wow!

does not seem a very scientific description, perhaps more from the village .... metal box and the position then be able to deduce that both female and pregnant is the stuff of wizards ...:-D


then I do not understand what is meant .. "and poisonous for her" .....



avatarsenior
sent on August 24, 2014 (15:24) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

The male normally thinner and c / a 2 - 2 1/2 inches in diameter, this seems to me a little bit more, a typical female. E 'known to the custom of the old fungaioli settembrini, the use of the cap when you enter a forest, because in the period of the birth of vipers (usually September), are used to dangle from any branch to fall to the ground and the live young already with doses of poison fatal to the mother herself (although this is not scientific). Hopefully if "one" does not work on the field, you can always type VIPERS on the internet, and learn something.
I apologize to Michele Marini, for the space stolen.
A greeting.

avatarsenior
sent on August 24, 2014 (16:55) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

popular beliefs from fungaioli settembrini let them run in the wind ...:-D
from the photograph, this one, you definitely can not establish the measures and proportions, much less pregnancy.
at least if you were given the tail, and well, I could understand.
maybe you have not seen the measurements of a aspis when it blows .......... or even beautiful in the flesh or if she has recently eaten ........ and even its actual length.
ethological data: the Viper aspis for a few days "care of" the little ones before they parted for good, that puppies do not bite absolutely not the mother who gives birth to and from the branches, but only on the ground.
Unfortunately, I was working on the field ......
toxicological data. the little ones have a poison far superior in terms of toxicity to that of the mother, it applies to all categories of poisonous snakes, but given the fewSSIMA amount of poison, however, is not fatal to humans.
I forgot there are those who view also suck the milk from the udders of the cows .... who knows ...... maybe it's true
but on the internet you can always tell .... es.
[URL =] www.lindifferenziato.com/2012/07/27/vipera-aspis-between-legend-and-re


avatarsupporter
sent on August 24, 2014 (19:59) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Not being an expert on the subject is not within the discussion. As far as I remember the viper was roughly about 40 cm. Anyway thanks for the valuable information:-)

avatarsenior
sent on August 24, 2014 (20:18) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

if it was about 40 cm was a subadult. the maximum is 90, but on average are between 60-70 cm. 90 is enough raro.ciao;-)

avatarsenior
sent on August 24, 2014 (20:45) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

dear Moth, I have handled more than you do of vipers I've seen on television. Your irony does not lead anywhere, and if you think you are a herpetologist because you have a pet python in a glass case, well leave things as they are.
As far as I'm concerned the argument ends here.

avatarsenior
sent on August 24, 2014 (21:33) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Giorgio useless that you take it also if you shoot the news as decant your stables of vipers without knowing what I could have ever done then the sin of presumption. the staff leave him at home.
I think it is only right to give the information accurate and what you said on the birth of vipers is a c..zata immense.
I am always ready and open to debate but with knowledge of the facts and do not ever close for education.
Possibly if "one" does not work on the field, you can always type VIPERS on the internet, and learn something.

your so quoted should go on the internet you've demonstrated well ......
Michele sin for which your unhappy with this action you have soiled the post.

avatarsupporter
sent on August 24, 2014 (22:25) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

I do not want to litigate a viper. The important thing is to give the right information because we can not joke about certain topics. Try to clarify and I am sure that you will find a meeting point.
Thank you
Michele-)

avatarsupporter
sent on August 25, 2014 (11:12) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

I know the place where it was found the viper and I know enough to know that Michele tells it like it is. I was the first to have doubts about the location of the viper, and unusually high on a branch quite thin but obviously the high humidity of the moment led her to seek a point where drying and in that place the brambles are the only thing that rises from the ground. I am a fungaiolo as Michael and how he attend the local mycological group and I got to see a lot of snakes but I've never seen or heard from others of vipers to little more than a few tens of cm from the ground. Hello

avatarjunior
sent on August 25, 2014 (12:56) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Interesting as a document, it happens, however, that even the vipers is on small shrubs lead to better absorb the sun's rays under certain conditions.
As for the rest, I can only endorse all that expressed by Moth, popular beliefs die hard and the birth of the trees is unfortunately deeply rooted and obviously false.
I would be interested to know the geographical area in which the specimen was photographed.
Luca

avatarsenior
sent on August 25, 2014 (15:06) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

not being arboreal and therefore devoid of prehensile tail does not go beyond the 20/40 cm from the ground and there is nothing supernatural or so trascedentale to find it, it may simply be because you're moving, searching for a ray of sunshine or because the going at that time, moisture can also be a good reason.

the berus instead also lives in the bushes mountain so it can happen, going for blueberries or juniper, of trovarsela his hands .....

ps fungaroli to believe and not with hat or turban that is ...:-D I hope not ammazziate when found ......




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