Tasmanian snake handler finds
copperhead snake eating another smaller snake
Chris Daly said smaller snake was
probably trying to mate before being eaten
Amazingly it was
regurgitated by the larger snake and survived
An experienced snake handler has
made an interesting discovery - finding a female snake eating her smaller male
mate.
Reptile Rescue Tasmania snake
handler Chris Daly was called out to a house in Sorell, Tasmania to collect a
serpent on Saturday.
'When I pulled up I noticed she
was a little, well, girthy, and wasn't moving as quickly as you would expect
her to,' he said.
Experienced snake handler Chris
Daly shared images of a female copperhead snake he was called to relocate only
to find it midway through ingesting another snake.
'She still had the little guy in
her mouth and was moving around while the tail was still wriggling
around.'
'I think he was wanting to have a
go and she wasn't having any of it and decided she wanted to eat him instead,'
Mr Daly said.
Amazingly the larger female
seemed to change her mind after being caught and decided to regurgitate her
potential mate, who was still alive when he was spat out.
Mr Daly said it wasn't likely she
regurgitated the snake because of his size.
Copperhead snake eats and
regurgitates another
'She was about two and a half
foot and he was about two foot long, so she was probably going to cruise around
with the tail hanging out until her stomach acids broke him down enough to
swallow a little more, like a noodle,' he said.
'The male snake was a little
lethargic afterwards so I took him back and hydrated him, heated him up and he
is doing pretty well.
'I plan to release him again
soon.'
Mr Daly released the female snake
back into an area close to where she was found but said it wasn't wise to do
the same with the male snake.
He didn't want to run the risk of
it being eaten again so he will release him in a new area.
Mr Daly said it wasn't unusual
for copperhead snakes to eat other snakes, in fact it was their main source of
survival in the recent Tasmanian drought.
'With the drought there are less
frogs around, there is less water and prey animals, things are really dry but
from our research we found the bigger copperheads were preying on smaller
snakes,' he said.
'Similar to the mainland
Red-bellied black snake they can be quiet cannibalistic,' he said.
Amazingly when he collected the
snake she started to regurgitate the smaller male snake (pictured together)
which managed to survive the attempted ingestion
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