Thetype locality given is "Kapaor in Nova Guinea boreali occidentali ... et prope Andai ". The authors also stated localities for two additional specimens: "... un esemplare a Kapaor fra i Papua Onin..." and "... un secondo esemplare ad Andai presso Dorei..." (= Kapoar, Onin Peninsula and Andai, near Dorei, Irian Jaya, Indonesia).[2]
Some doubt can be cast on its occurrence on Normanby, as McDowell (1975)[6] had erroneously assigned Bara Bara to this island, rather than to the mainland ofPapua New Guinea[5] inMilne Bay Province as stated by Boulenger (1898)[7] and Koopman (1982).[8]
Female adults ofL. albertisii grow to an average of about 213 cm (6–7 ft) in total length (including tail). Both sexes are patternless, except for some light markings on thepostoculars. Thedorsum of the head is shiny black, and the upper and lowerlabial scales are white with black markings on the anterior edge of the scales. Body color is either brownish-violet fading to yellowish ventrally or blackish-blue fading to gray.
Although mostly terrestrial,L. albertisii can and is known to occasionally climb.[11] White-lipped pythons are reportedly aggressive, though this is reduced in those born and raised in captivity.[12]L. albertisii also has been observed to regularly regurgitate fur balls from its prey.[13]
The diet ofL. albertisii includes a range of small-sized to medium-sized birds and mammals.[14] Neonates and juveniles often feed on lizards. Heat sensitive pits in the upper and lower jaws are used to help locate prey during nocturnal hunting.[11]
L. albertisii isoviparous. A sexually mature female may lay aclutch of about a dozen eggs. The eggs stick together in a compact pile, and the female coils around them. The hatchlings emerge after about two months of incubation and are about 38 cm (15 in) in length.[14]
^abSchleip, Wulf D. (2008). "Revision of the genusLeiopython Hubrecht 1879 (Serpentes: Pythonidae) with the redescription of taxa recently described by Hoser (2000) and the description of new species".Journal of Herpetology.42 (4):645–667.doi:10.1670/06-182R5.1.
^McDowell SB (1975). "A catalogue of the snakes of New Guinea and the Solomon’s, with special Reference to Those in the Bernice P. Bishop Museum. Part II". (24.02.1975).Journal of Herpetology9 (1): 1-79.
^Koopman KF (1982). "Results of the Archibold Expedition No. 109. Bats from Eastern Papua and the East Papua Islands".American Museum Novitates (2747): 1-34.
^Peters W,Doria G (1878). "Catalogo dei rettili e dei batraci raccolti daO. Beccari, L. M. D'Albertis e A. A. Bruijn nella sotto-regione austro-malese ".Annali del Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Genova, Series 1,13: 323-450. ("Liasis Albertisii ", new species, pp. 401-403 + Plate III, Figure 2). (in Italian and Latin).
^Beolens, Bo;Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011).The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp.ISBN978-1-4214-0135-5. (Leiopython albertisii, p. 64;L. bennettorum, p. 22).
Cogger HG (2014).Reptiles and Amphibians of Australia, Seventh Edition. Clayton, Victoria, Australia: CSIRO Publishing. xxx + 1,033 pp.ISBN978-0643100350. (Leiopython albertisii, p. 821).
Reynolds, R. Graham;Niemiller, Matthew L.;Revell, Liam J. (2014). "Toward a Tree-of-Life for the boas and pythons: Multilocus species-level phylogeny with unprecedented taxon sampling".Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution71: 201–213.