BBC Wildlife Magazine

Q&A

Can snakes be cannibalistic?

SNAKES ARE A FAR MORE DIVERSE group than they might appear, to human eyes at least. The 4,000 or so species feed variously on mammals, birds, eggs, lizards, fish, snails, worms and insects. Many, including Europe’s smooth snake, will happily eat other snakes, given the opportunity. And some – the kingsnakes of North America, for example, or Asia’s king cobra – are full-blown ophiophages, specialising in serpentine prey. But this couldn’t really be called cannibalism, in the same way that a lion eating a fellow mammal couldn’t. True cannibalism – killing and eating a member of one’s own species – is rather rare throughout the animal kingdom. Some snakes, though, do meet this standard,), while in the south of France, male Montpellier snakes eat the females outside of the mating season. There are also intriguing cases of captive snakes swallowing their own tails, ouroboros-style, presumably in mistake for prey, which could be regarded as an extreme form of cannibalism. However, it’s not clear whether this occurs in nature.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Wildlife Magazine

BBC Wildlife Magazine1 min read
Fast Answers
Put simply, living things can be put into two categories based on how they obtain energy and nutrients. Those that can produce their own via photosynthesis and chemosynthesis are called autotrophs (hence ‘auto’) and include plants, algae and many bac
BBC Wildlife Magazine1 min read
Blowin’ In The Wind
PHOTOGENIC DRIFTS OF BILLOWING white seedheads are a classic feature of peaty uplands in summer. They look especially dreamy backlit with the golden light of dawn or evening. These fluffy heads belong to cottongrass, which is neither a grass nor rela
BBC Wildlife Magazine1 min read
Top 10 Species To Spot From A Ferry
Most likely sightings are off western Britain, particularly around the Isle of Man Reliably spotted in the coastal waters of northern Scotland and West Wales Widespread off south-west England, West Wales and northern Scotland A ferry between mainland

Related Books & Audiobooks