Green Anaconda
Eunectes murinus
The green anaconda is a giant boa of the Amazon, Orinoco, Pantanal, and other slow-water systems of tropical South America. It is often described as the heaviest living snake, with females reaching far greater size than males and spending much of their lives in marshes, flooded forest, oxbow lakes, and river margins. Olive-green scales with dark oval blotches provide camouflage in water, and the high-set eyes and nostrils suit an ambush predator that takes fish, waterbirds, caimans, capybaras, and other animals it can overpower.
Captive green anacondas are animals for major zoos, research facilities, or very experienced private keepers where allowed, not casual reptile pets. They require a secure heated enclosure built around a large water area. Heavy-duty locks, safe drains, and enough room for the snake to move and thermoregulate are part of basic planning. Handling a large adult involves written procedures and multiple trained people. Breeding is viviparous, with large females giving birth to live young, so any breeding plan must account for offspring placement long before pairing. Field work and conservation are closely tied to wetland protection and responsible conflict response.
Colors: Albino, Black, Brown, Green, Leucistic, Melanistic, Olive, Olive Green, Spotted, Wild Type, Yellow