» Site Navigation
1 members and 601 guests
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 75,916
Threads: 249,118
Posts: 2,572,199
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
|
-
I came across this on CNN.com:
http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/science...rab/index.html
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CINCINNATI, Ohio (CNN) -- Snake-studying scientists have long thought the feeding behavior of the reptiles was simple to describe -- all snakes swallow their prey whole. But now researchers have identified a small tropical snake from Singapore that eats soft shell crabs by ripping them apart and swallowing the pieces bite by bite.
Bruce Jayne of Cincinnati University and colleagues describe the novel process in a paper published in this week's edition of the British journal Nature.
The hard part for the Gerard water snake in tearing apart its meal is just getting a firm hold on it. The snake clamps its mouth on the crab with relative ease. But with no limbs to use to pin the crab down, it's hard for the snake to pull it into pieces. So the snake makes itself into a loop and lassos the crab, holding it tight with its body while its head pulls off bites and swallows them.
"The snake literally rips the crab's body apart," said Jayne. "They'll tug and pull on it to tear it apart."
While researchers have observed this snake in nature before, and even knew that it eats crabs, they had never before observed the feeding process.
Jayne was able to confirm the feeding method by using an infrared camera to take movies of a snake chowing down on a crab in his laboratory, in the dark.
"They're kind of a bashful species," Jayne said. They wouldn't eat when I watched them, but when I used the IR camera I found out there was this stereotypical behavior."
-
-
BPnet Veteran
Whoa! Sweet! Thats awsome, snakes eating crabs what has the world come to, LOL!
Ball Pythons: Link
If you have any advice for a new keeper pm me.
-
-
BPnet Veteran
Cool! That's certainly different!
3.1.1 BP (Snyder, Hanover, Bo Peep, Sir NAITF, Eve), 1.2.3 Rhacodactylus ciliatus (Sandiego, Carmen, Scooby, Camo, BABIES ), 1.0 Chow (Buddha), 0.2 cats (Jezebel, PCBH "Nanners"), 0.3 humans
xnview for resizing and coverting pics
Support Ball-Pythons.net by shopping our store!
-
-
BPnet Veteran
I wish the pic didn't have so much sand on the snake, I'd love to see its color and markings.
Ball Pythons: Link
If you have any advice for a new keeper pm me.
-
-
BPnet Veteran
Very cool article Brad, thanks for sharing it with us!!
Life is like a game of poker. You can play each hand to the best of your ability but you are still going to run into a bad beat from time to time. What matters is how you handle it. Do you go on tilt or can you maintain your composure & rebuild your stack?
-
-
BPnet Veteran
MMM Crabs..lol
Great article Brad, thanks for sharing it
Rusty
-
-
VERY cool! I love learning new stuff like this! Thanks for sharing!
-
-
BPnet Veteran
Thanks for the article! cool stuff!
-
-
Banned
Heh, there are lots of snakes like that.
Here is a link that shows some, it includes the gerard's water snake.
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgu...UTF-8%26sa%3DG
There ya go.
Bye.
-collin
-
-
Wow! I give that snake alot of credit. Eating crablegs has to be one of the most difficult feats in the culinary world (for us), and we have fingers to use!
-Jen. Back in the hobby after a hiatus!
Ball pythons:
0.1 normal; 1.1 albino. 1.0 pied; 0.1 het pied; 1.0 banana.
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|