Melissa Kaplan's
Herp Care Collection
Last updated August 11, 2002
Rosy Boa
Charina (=Lichanura) trivigata spp.
©1995 Melissa Kaplan
Rosy boas are one of the smaller members of the boa family. Like many
boas and pythons, they are nocturnal (sometimes crepuscular), thus
moving around mostly at night or around dawn and dusk. Rosys may live
in excess of 15 years. Their name comes from Lichan = forefinger (Gr.(=)
and - oura = tail, possibly due to the bluntness of their tail. Trivirgata
refers to their prominent triad of stripes.
There are currently four subspecies of rosy
boas; as with the classification of many animals, the taxonomists
frequently dispute the species and subspecies designations. As more
information is learned about the physiognomy and range of the animals
in question, these may change Currently, the subspecies designations
for the rosy boas are:
C. trivirgata Rosy Boa. to 40 in (100 cm).
Ranges through southwestern U.S. (Southern California, Arizona, and
northern Mexico). Ground color slate gray or brown.
L. t. bostici Mexican Rosy Boa. Ground color
laced with pale, creamy broad longitudinal stripes. (Or, L. t. bostici
= Cedros Island Rosy Boa and L. t. trivigata = Mexican Rosy Boa)
L. t. roseofusca Coastal Rosy Boa. Ground color
laced with blotchy reddish-brown longitudinal stripes.
L. t. gracia Desert Rosy Boa. Ground color
laced with well-defined pink, orange or tan longitudinal stripes.
Rosys look much like their cousins, the Rubber
boa (Charina bottae). Rosy heads are set off slightly more from their
bodies, and the tops of their heads are covered with numerous small
scales, rather then the fewer, but much larger, scales of the Rubber
boa. Rubber boas have blunt, rounded tails while the Rosy tails are
more tapered, ending in a rounded tip.
Housing
Rosys range in size from 2-3 feet (never more than 4 feet) in overall
length and can thus easily be housed in a 20 gallon enclosure. They
do not climb much, needing only low branches, so a tall enclosure
need not be provided as for the more arboreal boas. Provide bark slabs
or half-logs for caves as an occasional alternative to substrate burrowing.
Substrate
Rosys like it dry. Their native habitat is mostly warm savannahs that
experience little rainfall. Although they are not desert dwellers,
they need to be kept in a dry tank like a desert dweller. Substrates
such as cypress mulch, aspen, small wood chips work well. Rosys are
burrowing snakes, so the substrate must be layered to a depth of at
least 2-4 inches. Plain paper may be used but small hide boxes (big
enough for the snake to get into but not so big that they can't feel
it around them) will have to be provided on both sides of the temperature
gradient.
Humidity
If you live in an area of higher humidity than their native range
(60%), you should consider an enclosure with a top or one or two sides
made of mesh, or that has solid sides with ventilation panels that
may be opened and closed as necessary to keep in warms but provide
enough ventilation to keep humidity levels down. In such climates,
substrates such as the mulch and aspen may not be suitable as they
tend to maintain a slightly higher humidity level than do wood chips.
Being kept in humidity higher than they are adapted to can cause skin
problems (bacterial or fungal infections) and the stress of being
kept in such conditions may lead to illness.
Water
You can provide a water bowl provided the snake is not able to tip
it over and that you do not fill it up so high that if the snake climbs
into it to soak it will not overflow. On the whole, bowls with less
surface area of exposed water will evaporate more slowly than bowls
allowing for a wide expanse of exposed water surface.
Temperatures
Rosys are from warm, but not desert climates (except the Desert Rosy).
73-83 F (23-28 C) temperature gradients will work well through most
of the year. Night time temps can drop slightly. Rosys spend most
of their time underground where the temperatures are more constant
than they are above ground. Provide heat by use of an undertank heating
pad under one-half of the tank. If additional heat is necessary during
the winter months, you may use an overheat heat source. If you need
to use the overhead source at night, make sure it is not a white light
bulb; use a dim red, blue or one of the nocturnal lights made especially
for reptiles, or a ceramic heating element. Be sure to monitor the
temperatures to be sure they do not rise over or fall under the temperature
gradient.
Feeding
Many snakes can take in surprisingly large (for their body and head
size) prey. Rosys have a relatively small gape, however, and so need
to be fed small prey items. Captive bred Rosys are easily fed on killed
mice, with young started out on pinkies, moving up to adult mice when
they are full grown. Young should be fed once or twice a week, adults
once every 7-10 days. Given their nocturnal habits, they are best
fed at night.
Breeding
To ensure successful breeding, Rosys should be hibernated during the
winter. Starting in November, feeding should be stopped. A couple
of weeks later, after the snake has defecated out the remains of its
last meal, the temperatures gradually reduced so that by December
the enclosure is at 55 F (13 C). Maintain this temperature for about
12 weeks (until March). Allow to come gradually to room temperature,
then warm slowly up to the normal temperature gradient. Begin weekly
or more frequent feedings, especially of the females. House males
and females separately.
In April, place the male into the female's
enclosure. After about a week or so of mating, return the male to
his enclosure. Add a warmer basking area to the female's enclosure,
up to 86 F (30 C) and maintain that throughout the pregnancy. Expect
that the female will not eat much--or at all--during this time.
Birth will generally occur in September. Five
to six live young (as many as 13 have been reported), each about 12
inches in overall length, will be born. The babies are active, often
feisty, but bites should not be of concern. Babies should be removed
from the mother shortly after birth.
After their first shed, which may occur as
soon as two days after birth or as long as two weeks later, feed the
babies pinkies. Some have reportedly fed prior to their first shed;
if they are particularly feisty or appear to be seeking, try offering
them food sooner. Remember: if you are housing them together you must
separate them at feeding time!
Some may not feed at all at this time: in the
wild, they are born just before the winter sets in, and in the wild
many such late-season babies do not eat at all, going right into hibernation
for the winter, emerging in the spring ready to feed. If they are
not losing body mass or weight while not feeding, then not feeding
should not be a reason for panic. It is always nice, however, to get
them feeding if you can, but resorting to force feeding should only
be done if the snake is losing weight. If the babies are feeding,
you may want to not hibernate them during their first winter, using
that time to feed them weekly and ensure them a good, healthy start
in life.
Young rosys will have almost attained their
full adult size by their second winter. Sexual maturity occurs by
age 3-4 years. Females in the wild generally breed only every other
year, though this may not be the case in captivity. If you do breed
yearly, be sure to evaluate the female's overall condition individually
each year before doing so. If she is not up to breeding weight or
has not fully recovered from the previous fall's birthing, let her
rest a year.