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  1. Four species of anaconda are currently known. All are native to South America and none are currently considered endangered; Green/Giant anaconda - Eunectes murinus, w two subspecies: Eunectes murinus murinus and Eunectes murinus gigas; Dark Spotted anaconda - Eunectes deschauenseei; Yellow/Paraguayan anaconda - Eunectes notaeus

  2. Nov 15, 2013 · A nonvenomous constrictor native to South America, the green anaconda is the biggest, heaviest species of snake in the world. It definitely does not belong in the Florida Everglades.

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  4. Lutz Dirksen managed to find a new, fourth anaconda species in the Beni region of Bolivia which he introduced to science as Eunectes beniensis.

  5. Eunectes murinus (Linnaeus, 1758) Common name: Green Anaconda. Taxonomy: available through. Injurious: This species is listed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service as injurious wildlife. Identification: The green anaconda is the largest snake in the world.

  6. Jul 17, 2020 · We found that the USA could protect a total of 59 (37%) of its endangered species by conferring highly protected status to United States Forest Service (USFS) and BLM lands (Supplementary...

    • Niall G. Clancy, John P. Draper, J. Marshall Wolf, Umarfarooq A. Abdulwahab, Maya Cassidy Pendleton,...
    • 2020
  7. The IUCN currently classifies the green anaconda as a species of least concern when it comes to extinction risk—but this classification is based in part on how widely distributed a species is.

  8. Jan 12, 2023 · Additionally, the authors suggest that an annual decline of 5%, using samples sizes of 5,000 individuals, would reveal population overexploitation. Declines greater than 10% using smaller samples sizes—of about 1,000 individuals—would also indicate overexploitation [ 59 ].