Reticulated Python
Python reticulatus
The reticulated python, Python reticulatus, is one of the world's longest snakes, native to Southeast Asia from mainland forests and wetlands to many island habitats. It is now also placed by many taxonomists in Malayopython, but the older name remains common in herpetoculture. The species is named for its netlike pattern of gold, black, tan, and gray, which breaks up its outline in vegetation and near water. Island dwarf and super-dwarf locality lines, along with many captive color morphs, are widely discussed because adult size varies greatly by ancestry.
Keeping a reticulated python is advanced reptile work, even when the animal is captive-bred and well started. Large adults require secure, escape-proof enclosures with strong heat sources, humidity control, heavy water containers, and space arranged for safe cleaning. Feeding should match body condition rather than encourage extreme growth, and big snakes are best handled with another trained person present. Buyers need to understand local restrictions, adult length, enclosure cost, and the difference between documented dwarf lineage and a small juvenile that may still become a very large constrictor.