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Naish_profile_70_px.jpg With six years of phd work on theropod dinosaurs behind him, Darren Naish mostly spends long hours in the library, hunched over his laptop. But he gets out sometimes, and picks up litter and pursues exotic lizards across the British countryside, aiming all the while to publish his technical work on obscure Cretaceous dinosaurs. He also messes around with pterosaurs, swimming giraffes, British big cats and stuff like that. He has given up on the stupid idea of being a dedicated academic and ekes out a living as a technical consultant, editor and author. He can be contacted intermittently at eotyrannus (at) gmail dot com. For more biographical info go here. PLEASE NOTE: I am now completely unable to keep up with email correspondence, due to sheer volume and to time constraints. I do my best to respond to all queries and requests, but please don't be offended if I fail to reply.

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The 'python bites fence' photo

Category: herpetologypicture of the day
Posted on: November 11, 2008 6:53 PM, by Darren Naish

I would not like to be bitten by an African rock python Python sebae. Here's why.

African_rock_python_bites_fence.jpg

Had previously seen this photo on TV but only recently found a version on the web. Apparently, the 4-m-long snake - which had recently eaten a female impala - is dead and died after trying to pass through the electric fence it is 'attacking'. This all happened on Silent Valley Ranch in the Waterberg mountains of South Africa. A few photos exist showing people touching the dead snake, and it was cut open to reveal the impala inside [go here], so despite my initial scepticism I currently think all of this is true. Sometimes the photo is accompanied by a story stating that the snake was eating someone's sheep. Not true: snopes.com says so. Incidentally, rock pythons do sometimes swallow male impala, horns and all. What happens then? The antelope's horns may fatally pierce the stomach and body wall (Mattison 1995), but such piercings are not always fatal: remarkably, the injuries may heal after the offending horns drop off as the prey's body decomposes inside the snake (Isemonger 1962). These and other cases of remarkable python predation were discussed here at Tet Zoo ver 1.

Refs - -

Isemonger, R. M. 1962. Snakes of Africa: Southern, Central and East. Thomas Nelson and Sons (Africa), Johannesburg.

Mattison, C. 1995. The Encyclopedia of Snakes. Blandford, London.

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Comments

1

Keep it away! Those disconnected palatal teeth (?) are really cool. Has there been any work on how they move or how they are muscled in the mouth? Are they capable of complex movements? Why do snakes have to be so damn villainous?

Posted by: Zach Miller | November 11, 2008 7:18 PM

2

It has joined the choir invisible. This is an ex- python...

Posted by: Pierce R. Butler | November 11, 2008 9:02 PM

3

Doesn't look like an electric fence to me. The post looks metallic and there are no insulators.

Posted by: chezjake | November 11, 2008 9:38 PM

4

I once arrived at a research farm in Namibia just in time to catch a commotion. Some staff were leaving to kill a snake that farmers reported had just eaten their 7-year-old daughter as she returned from school. Other children with her had seen it happen but could do nothing to help. Seeing the gape on this snake makes me realise just how possible it was.

Posted by: Richard Simons | November 11, 2008 9:40 PM

5

The fence is electric, but a most unusual design. If you follow the link you can see insulators, but the portion of the fence in the photo in Darren's post is not electrified. The electric portion consists of three wires on either side of the fence set very low to the ground. What is the deal with the wires actually lying on the ground? Are they "ground" wires? hehehe Also,electric fences usually do not carry lethal current. Curious.

Posted by: Blind Squirrel FCD | November 11, 2008 10:37 PM

6

Poor snake, that must have been an excruciating death.

Posted by: Nemo Ramjet | November 12, 2008 2:52 AM

7

Yeah, this look like an authentic case of 'snake eats bovid'. There seems to be an exaggeration concerning the size of the victim, though. A small exaggeration, but an exaggeration nontheless. From the website:

When the python was skinned they found a full grown Impala ewe [that] had just been swallowed.

That impala does not look fully grown to me, compared to the size of the man standing next to the opened-up snake. The average weight of a female impala is 41 kilograms (about 90 lbs.), according to this source. That individual looks like it's half that size, at most. (And no actual measurements of it are given.)

Posted by: Dartian | November 12, 2008 2:57 AM

8

Zach,

Watching a python eat a near maximum sized prey item you see a lot of teeth work. Specifically the disengagement of one side of the jaw that then slides forward and reengages followed by a matching move on the other side.

This is a really cool shot of a pythons mouth. Normally it is hard to make out the aesophagus (the little bump with a slit air hole on the bottom of the mouth) or the clear rear facing conical nature of the teeth. When eating near maximum sized prey (which can take quite some time) that airtube is pushed forward past the front of the mouth so the python can continue to breathe as it mouth walks up its prey.

Posted by: Veltyen | November 12, 2008 3:28 AM

9

Cool! Is this second row of teeth homologous with venomous teeth in aders?

Posted by: Jerzy | November 12, 2008 7:21 AM

10
the aesophagus (the little bump with a slit air hole on the bottom of the mouth)
Of course you meant the glottis--entrance to the trachea--not the esophagus.

Posted by: Sven DiMilo | November 12, 2008 7:24 AM

11

I've watched a film of a python swallowing a springbok. Has to be seen to be believed.

aesophagus

Oesophagus.

Is this second row of teeth homologous with venomous teeth in ad[d]ers?

No, those teeth are the only remaining maxillary teeth (and they are moved by moving the maxilla). Viperids retain the palatal teeth (on the pterygoid and I think the palatine).

Posted by: David Marjanović | November 12, 2008 9:20 AM

12

That is so metal, both figuratively and literally.

Posted by: Kevin | November 12, 2008 9:32 AM

13

sily snaek. shud hav eated cheezburger in sted.

Posted by: Mad Hussein LOLScientist, FCD | November 12, 2008 6:36 PM

14

Lesson learnt.

Next time I'll call it the snakey-breathy-tubey-thing. :)

Posted by: Veltyen | November 12, 2008 8:22 PM

15

The classic reference for python jaw muscles is:
Frazzetta, T.H. 1966. Studies on the morphology and function of the skull in the Boidae (Serpentes), Part II. Morphology and function of the jaw apparatus in Python sebae and Python molurus. Journal of Morphology 118: 217-296.
When I first saw these pictures about three years ago I initially suspected a really expert photo-augmentation job. This hung-up P. sebae looks super-normally toothy because the folds of oral mucosa that normally cover the teeth except for the tips ('vagina dentis', not to be confused with v. dentata) have dried out and shrunk in the few hours since death. Also the anterior teeth are much more robust than in the Australian python species I'm used to, because sebae and molurus are really serious large-prey specialists. Some Australian species eat fair-sized macropodids, but they've spent 25 million years not having to deal with primates or ungulates, and can afford relatively slender and erect teeth (it's like choosing hooks depending on the kind and size of fish you're after, and P. sebae is - figuratively - hunting shark).
Link under my name is the most recent python phylogenetic analysis by Rawlings et al. (2008), confirming Afro-Asian origin contrary to Kluge (1993).

Posted by: John Scanlon FCD | November 12, 2008 8:41 PM

16

Great photo. Excellent point regarding the robust teeth in sebae and molurus. Another group of macrostomatan snakes of possible interest for researching prey type and its effects on tooth size is the Morelia genus/complex of Australasia. Some interesting trends resulting from a wide body size range, and multiple transitions to highly arboreal living; plus some insular dwarfs.

Posted by: Mike Habib | November 12, 2008 10:02 PM

17

Apparently that link didn't work, so the phylogeny reference is:
Rawlings, L.H., D.L. Rabosky, S.C. Donnellan and
M.N. Hutchinson. 2008. Python phylogenetics: inference from morphology and mitochondrial DNA. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 93: 603�619.

I don't think they made the best use of the fossil data for calibration, but there's something to be done about that.

Posted by: John Scanlon FCD | November 12, 2008 10:05 PM

18

John Scanlon:

Some Australian species eat fair-sized macropodids, but they've spent 25 million years not having to deal with primates or ungulates, and can afford relatively slender and erect teeth

IIRC, Roger Martin (2005) told how one individual python interfered with his tree-kangaroo field studies to the extent that he had to remove the snake...

Reference:

Martin, R. 2005. Tree-kangaroos of Australia and New Guinea. CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood.

Posted by: Dartian | November 13, 2008 7:53 AM

19

The teeth look like ratchets to inch your body into its gullet, what a terrible way for that little girl to die, and for those who see her after the snake is opened up. Yuck. I hate snakes, whoever has one for a pet especiallly a large constictor should be visited by the men in white coats.

Posted by: Wellhunghorsecauk | August 12, 2009 4:58 AM

20

Wellhunghorsecauk, narrow minded much? Well, I hate horses, and I think anyone named "Well hung horse cauk" should be dragged through the streets on the way to the mental institution.

Posted by: Abrig | September 10, 2009 1:52 PM

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