A snake’s
ability to swallow enormous prey has long been a source of fascination, but the
common explanation that they dislocate their jaws is a myth.
Wayward
pythons are not uncommon in the Australian bush. Still, one camp manager
was quite
surprised when a python she relocated began to cough up its last meal: an
even larger python. A snake’s ability to swallow enormous prey has long
been the stuff of nightmares and fascination, but just how do they do it?
Scientist
Kenneth Kardong, writing in Copeia, explains that snake swallowing is all about
the jaw. A snake cannot swallow something that won’t fit past its jaws, so
snakes have a unique adaptation that allows them to increase their jaw
width, or “gape” as it is technically known. Contrary to popular myth, snakes
do not in fact dislocate their jaws. But they can certainly perform some
spectacular feats of jaw agility.
The snake’s
head “walks” forward in a side-to-side motion over the prey’s body.
In snakes,
the lower bones of the jaw, or mandibles, are not connected like they are in
mammals. At the front, each mandible is attached by a stretchy ligament. The
mandibles can therefore spread apart laterally, increasing the width of the
mouth. The mandibles are loosely connected at the back to the skull, allowing
for much greater rotation than most animals have. This is how the snake can
open its mouth wider than its body. The mandibles move independently of each
other, slowly inching the prey into the throat. Simultaneously, the snake’s
head “walks” forward in a side-to-side motion over the prey’s body, so as the
prey is levered backward the head moves forward. The process can take a while.
Backward-pointing teeth help ensure the prey does not escape if it is still
alive.
Swallowing
is only half the battle, though, and prey must also be digested. Snakes don’t
chew their food; they chemically digest it. So there is limited mechanical
breakdown. Digestive enzymes can only act on the tough outside of a meal.
Consequently, snake digestion can take a while, and snakes often cough up
partially-digested meals.
According to
scholars F. Harvey Pough and John D. Groves in American Zoologist, pit
vipers have a particularly
terrifying way of dealing with the digestion problem. Pit vipers have large
heads and thick bodies, allowing them to swallow extremely large prey relative
to their body size. As a result, digestion for pit vipers can be especially
slow. This poses real risks to the snake, as snakes are vulnerable while
digesting. Also, if digestion does not outpace putrefaction, partially-digested
prey might expand inside the snake’s body with dangerous consequences. Pit
vipers, however, have an ace in hole: venom. Their long fangs inject
protein-dissolving venom deep into the prey’s body. The venom aids digestion by
turning the prey’s insides into goo. Problem solved.
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By: Kenneth
V. Kardong
Copeia, Vol.
1977, No. 2 (May 25, 1977), pp. 338-348
American
Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists (ASIH)
By: F.
Harvey Pough and John D. Groves
American
Zoologist, Vol. 23, No. 2 (1983), pp. 443-454
Oxford
University Press
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