This week will look
at snakes the legless reptiles, they are far more diverse and surprising than
most people realise so here is some information about them.
It is believed that
they evolved from four‑limbed lizards around 100 million years ago. Some
species, like pythons and boas, still carry tiny vestigial leg bones —
evolutionary leftovers.
They can be found
everywhere except Ireland, Iceland, New Zealand, and the polar regions.
They live in some
amazing habitats such as forests, deserts, grasslands, mountains but only up to
16,000 feet, oceans and even 800 feet underwater of Australia.
They don’t hear
airborne sound well but detect ground vibrations with great sensitivity. Their
eyes are covered by a transparent scale called a spectacle, which sheds with
the rest of the skin. Many species use heat‑sensing pits to detect warm‑blooded
prey.
When it comes to moving,
they use several locomotion styles depending on the terrain there is the
classic slithering which is called lateral undulation, then there is
rectilinear movement which is for slow, stalking. Some can glide from tree-to-tree
others are excellent swimmers and when on loose sand the do something called
sidewinding.
Do you know what
they eat, well they are carnivores so small snakes eat insects, frogs, lizards
and rodents. Larger ones can eat deer, antelope, capybaras and even jaguars,
not something I have ever they would eat. Mostly because they swallow prey
whole thanks to flexible jaws. Also, some can go two years without eating due
to extremely slow metabolism.
Most
snakes lay eggs, but some give birth to live young, babies are independent from
birth needing no parental care. A few species (like pythons and king cobras)
guard their nests. Some females can store sperm for years. The Brahminy blind
snake is all‑female and reproduces without males.
There are about 725
venomous species, and 250 can kill a human with one bite.
The most dangerous snake globally (in terms of human deaths) is the saw‑scaled
viper.
Australia’s inland
taipan is the most venomous by toxicity but rarely kills because it avoids
humans.
About one‑third of
adults have some level of snake fear. Scientists believe this may be an evolutionary
instinct — early humans who avoided snakes were more likely to survive.
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