Just in case you thought that fictional
sources such as The Swiss Family Robinson had got it wrong, we have here an
example of the great snake’s capacity.
It makes one wonder just what the true giants of the Amazon that I have
also posted on are really capable of eating.
I am sure however, that they mostly focus on the obvious target of alligators.
Most everything else can actually get
away fairly easily. Stories aside this
is not a creature that is really able to ambush the unwary quite that
easily. As mentioned here the deer was
already dead before this snake decided to consume the corpse.
An alligator on the other hand is
obviously rather vulnerable to such a snake as are smaller prey.
The bottom line is that a slew of
formerly tame giant snakes are now populating the semi tropical portions of Florida at least. This remains an unpleasant development that
will be difficult to reverse.
We are of course reminded why the
human brain is hard wired to trigger its fright and flight response the
instance it observes a snake at close range.
I had the privilege of field testing the phenomena as a teenager. I had no conscious memory of my explosive twenty
yard sprint until it has completed and it was time to slow down. That reaction would have saved my life in the
jungle.
It is quite an experience to
discover your body deciding to remove you out of harm’s way.
Giant Rogue Python Swallows Deer Whole
LiveScience.com – 23 hours ago
To a hungry python, no meal is too big. That's what wildlife officials
in the Florida Everglades
discovered last week when they came across a giant python that had just
swallowed an entire adult deer.
More than 15 feet from nose to tail, the Burmese python was one of the
largest snakes ever found in South Florida .
After swallowing the 76-pound female deer, which was dead before the snake ate
it, the reptile's midsection expanded to a husky 44 inches.
"This is clearly an extreme event," Skip Snow, a biologist
and python specialist at Everglades
National Park , told the
Sun-Sentinel. "It shows you they can eat huge things."
But just how does a python
swallow such a large meal?
"One of the enduring myths about snake-feeding mechanisms is the
idea that the jaws detach," explained Patrick T. Gregory, a biology
professor at the University
of Victoria . "In
fact, they stay connected all the time."
The snake's lower jaw is not joined in the middle, as a human jaw is;
instead, the two sides are attached in the center by an elastic tendon. This
helps them spread their mouth wide, and another special skull bone allows them
more range to open it vertically. Together, these adaptations widen the opening
to their stomach.
The snake then takes plenty of time getting its meal down its throat.
It slathers its prey with saliva, and then uses its toothy upper jaw to shove
the animal down its throat.
Swallowing a deer is impressive, but pythons have also been known to
take down alligators,
small humans and even other large snakes.
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