Used
with permission from P. Ryan, The Snorkeller's Guide to the Coral Reef, Exisle
Publ. (Auckland).
After
G. Allen and R. Steene. 1994. Indo- Pacific coral reef field guide, Tropical Reef
Research (Singapore).
After
Jordan D, B Evermann. 1903. The aquatic resources of the Hawaiian Islands. Part
1. The shore fishes. US Bureau Fish. Bull. 23:1- 574.
Snake
eel
(a fish)
Moray
eel
(a fish)
Banded
sea snake
Well,
not to fear. We do not have the brown tree snake in Samoa. So, if you see a large
snake on Ta'u island, don't kill it. However, if you see one on Tutuila Island,
it is very important that you send it to DMWR for identification. It is essential
that we keep the brown tree snake out of American Samoa. Several of them have
already slipped into Hawaii hidden in air cargo shipments from Guam. The snakes
will crawl into the cargo or onto the plane's landing gear and then go wherever
the plane goes.
The
Pacific boa looks a lot like another undesirable snake species, the brown tree
snake (Boiga irregularis), which we don't have in Samoa and hopefully never
will. You may have heard that the brown tree snake invaded Guam and caused havoc
there. It wiped out Guam's native bird species and helped decimate their fruit
bat populations by eating the young bats left hanging in the trees when the adults
flew off to find food.
Parents in Guam were even advised to keep their
infants and small children away from this snake because it is somewhat poisonous
and occasionally has been caught lunching on a baby's arm.
A
final note. On rare occasions, sea snakes have been seen in our coastal waters.
One verified airbreathing banded sea snake (probably Laticauda columbrina) was
collected here in 2000. However, most local sightings of sea snakes
are actually fish (eels) that are very snake-like in appearance. It would not
be difficult to confuse the two:
This
harmless snake is widely distributed around the world, but it is not native to
our islands. It was probably introduced here when its eggs were carried in the
soil attached to some imported plants or machinery. In 1993, it was found in the
Tafuna area. Others were found in the Pago Pago area in 2001. The other snake
found infrequently on Ta'u Island is the gata or Pacific boa (Candoia bibroni).
It also occurs in western Samoa. At one time it inhabited Tutuila Island (its
bones were found there) but it went extinct for unknown reasons. On Ofu, an older
resident remembers seeing one there when he was a child.
The Pacific
boa is more commonly found on islands closer to Indonesia; American Samoa appears
to be the eastward limit of its distribution. It can grow to a respectable length
of 3 to 6 feet and is tan or darkly colored, but its coloration can be variable.
This species is usually found in forests, it is active mainly at night, and it
probably eats lizards, rats, and small birds and bird eggs.
Snakes
in Samoa? You bet. Two kinds, one right here on Tutuila Island and the other on
Ta'u Island. Fortunately, neither is the dreaded brown tree snake (more about
that below). Also fortunately, neither is poisonous, both mind their own business,
and they are no threat to anyone.
On
Tutuila, we have an unusually small black snake that looks like an odd earthworm
about 6 inches long. A closer inspection reveals that it has tiny scales. It's
called the potted soil snake or blind burrowing snake (Ramphotyphlops braminus),
because it has almost no eyes and it burrows through the soil. This secretive
nocturnal snake is occasionally found by someone digging in their garden. It eats
small soil creatures like termites and insect larvae.
27. Snakes in Samoa!