Researchers
in South Africa investigate cannibalism in cape cobras and others in the region
Date: October 2, 2018
Source: Ecological Society of America
Summary:
Researchers
in South Africa's Kalahari Desert found a large male cape cobra devouring
another smaller male of the same species. Surprised by the thought-to-be-rare
event, they decided to investigate how common and widespread cannibalism was in
cobras.
Last spring,
researchers in South Africa's Kalahari Desert found a large male cape cobra
devouring another smaller male of the same species. Surprised by the
thought-to-be-rare event, they decided to investigate how common and widespread
cannibalism was in cobras.
Apart from a
few species, scientific understanding of snake diets is lacking. Snakes are
elusive creatures that feed relatively infrequently, making feeding observations
difficult to come by. Bryan Maritz, a researcher at the University of the
Western Cape and lead author of the new study in the Ecological Society of
America's journal Ecology, explains, "This work highlights a renewed
effort to meaningfully quantify several aspects of snake natural history,
especially in poorly studied regions such as Africa."
While cape
cobras are known to eat other snake species -- up to a third of their diet --
recorded instances of cape cobras eating individuals of the same species, known
as conspecifics, has been extremely rare. Scientists have treated such reported
observations as aberrant behavior.
So, what
caused this cape cobra to attack and eat the smaller male of its kind? How
often does this happen? Do all cobras take part in cannibalism?
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