
The Green Anaconda, or Eunectes murinus, is the heaviest, largest, and longest snake in South America. Many legends and lore circulate around the length of the Giant Anaconda. Two decades later, the team guided by David Tarknishvili succeeded in extracting DNA from the old tissue samples to substantiate and verify the specific genetic status of the Beni Anaconda.Green Anaconda (Eunectes murinus) seen in the Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve 2. candidate Lutz Dirksen managed to find a new, fourth anaconda species in the Beni region of Bolivia which he introduced to science as Eunectes beniensis.įirst erroneously regarded as a hybrid between the big Green Anaconda and the smaller Yellow or Paraguay Anaconda, the morphological analysis strongly suggested its status as an own, independent species, the fourth of its genus and growing at least up to 4 m in length. student Mark Auliya, his former fellow Ph.D. Apart from two new insular subspecies of the Reticulated Python-up to 9 m in length and together with the Green Anaconda the longest snake on earth-which were discovered by Museum Koenig's former Ph.D.

The giant snakes, however, had some surprises ready for the researchers from Bonn.

In contrast, the discovery of large, conspicuous new vertebrate species is much rarer and attracts the attention not only of specialists, but also of the broader public.īut undiscovered large-growing reptiles can be found, as has been shown by the more than dozen new monitor lizard species that have been described by members of the herpetological section of the Museum Koenig in Bonn since 1988.

Nowadays, the discovery of a new species is for the taxonomically working zoologist not very unusual, as long as these new species are small and inconspicuous. The new findings have been published in Amphibia-Reptilia.
