This is the book you should buy ... It had a Green Python on the cover and is a definitive work on the subject.  Click here for further details.GREEN PYTHONS
GENUS CHONDROPYTHON MEYER, 1874

Editor's note: 2009 - there are now two species of Green Python recognised and two further subspecies. See paper by Hoser 2009 in Australasian Journal of Herpetology "Creationism and contrived science: A review of recent python systematics papers and the resolution of issues of taxonomy and nomenclature." Issue number 2, pages 1-34.
The link for that newer paper is here:

The material that follows below is text from the paper - A revision of the Australiasian Pythons.
(Originally published in Ophidia Review 1(1) in "Autumn" 2000 - (Publication date: October 2000), pp. 7-27).

For the text of the full paper

This is the Green Python. There is only one species within the genus. That is Chondropython viridis.

The type locality is the Aru Islands, Indonesia, south of New Guinea. Many recent workers have made synonymous this genus and Morelia, the latter name taking precedence. This author does not accept that arrangement. While it is clear that the two genera derived from the same ancestral stock, it is believed that the two have been separated long enough to warrant being placed in separate genera.

The lack of a distinct dorsal pattern of blotches and stripes that typifies all Morelia (except spilota) or a black and yellow dorsal pattern as in spilota separates Chondropython from all snakes in Morelia. There are no iridescent green Morelia. This is the usual dorsal colouration for adult Chondropython. The absence of labial pits in Chondropython is frequently cited as a characteristic that separates the genera Chondropython and Morelia. That is not so. In fact both genera have distinct labial pits. See the photos published in Hoser (1989) or O'Shea (1996) to view the labial pits in both genera.

The Green Pythons are readily distinguished from all other Australian pythons. Refer to Hoser (1981a) McDowall (1975) and O'Shea (1996) for further diagnostic information. Australian Green Pythons (as cited by Thomson (1935)) are more likely than the New Guinea specimens to have markings along the spine to form some sort of vertebral line or pattern. This is corroborated by other authors including the photos in Greer (1997). However the same trait is also seen commonly in south New Guinea specimens.

Specimens from the north of New Guinea are likely to have spots in a more irregular pattern.

Specimens from around the high country of Wamena in Irian Jaya are a very dark green with buttercup yellow spots on the back. The dark yellow ventral scales are commonly a grey/black in colour. As with Morelia, Chondropython is a species with considerable variation in colour, not only between locations, but even within a single location and even within a single litter of young.

Photos of Australian Green Pythons in life with exact locality data are shown in Greer (1997).

Photos of New Guinea Green Pythons in life are shown by O'Shea (1996).

Refer to McDowell (1975) for further details.

The above was from the paper - A revision of the Australiasian Pythons.
(Originally published in Ophidia Review 1(1) in "Autumn" 2000 - (Publication date: October 2000), pp. 7-27).

Below are photos of Australian Green Pythons, Chondropython viridis shireenae sometimes called Morelia viridis shireenae in life.

For the text of the full paper

To download the original of this paper - with photos exactly as it appeared in the journal Ophidia Review - as an Adobe Acrobat pdf file

Download the full paper as an MS Word document (better for printing)

Webpage keywords include:Green Python Chondropython viridis, Australia, Australian, Chondropython viridis shireenae, Chondropython azureus is from Northern New Guinea, species and subspecies, Chondropython adelynhoserae is from Normanby Island, PNG, Meyer, Hoser, 2009, Hoser 2003, Green Tree Python, Chondropython nominate form is from southern New Guinea and nearby Islands


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