Home » 4-foot snake vomits up 2 smaller snakes — and 1 was still alive

4-foot snake vomits up 2 smaller snakes — and 1 was still alive

Wildlife officials in Georgia stumbled across a pair of snakes that had been “expelled” by a larger serpent, only to discover that one of the regurgitated victims was still alive.

When wildlife officials in Georgia stumbled upon a pair of seemingly lifeless snakes that had been vomited up by another, larger snake, they were already surprised by what they had found. But things took an even weirder twist when one of the regurgitated serpents suddenly woke up and slithered off.

Wildlife technicians from Georgia’s Department of Natural Resources (DNR) came across the unusual scene in November 2023 while surveying federally protected eastern indigo snakes (Drymarchon couperi) in southern Georgia, according to a DNR Facebook post written on Aug. 29.

The team found a live 4-foot-long (1.2 meters) indigo snake alongside two other snakes — a “young rat snake” and a juvenile eastern diamondback rattlesnake (Crotalus adamanteus) — that had both “clearly [been] swallowed and then expelled” by the larger snake, DNR representatives wrote.

While the rat snake did not survive being eaten, the regurgitated rattlesnake eventually showed signs of life around an hour after it was found, and it didn’t seem to be particularly bothered by the ordeal. “It was later seen basking in the sun instead of taking shelter in a burrow,” DNR representatives wrote.

If that wasn’t odd enough, the wildlife experts soon realized that the rattlesnake also had a large bulge in its midsection, suggesting it had recently swallowed a mouse whole.

“This unusual episode not only reveals the indigo’s impressive hunting abilities but also the rattlesnake’s unexpected resilience,” DNR representatives wrote

Snakes eating one another whole is nothing new, and the size of the meal is rarely an obstacle.

For example, in June 2022, a Georgia resident filmed an eastern kingsnake (Lampropeltis getula) slowly eating a much larger timber rattlesnake (Crotalus horridus). A study released in August this year also documented an incident where a Burmese python (Python bivittatus) swallowed a larger reticulated python (Malayopython reticulatus) from the tail up.

However, eating such massive prey also comes with risks, such as choking.

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