This image can get pretty creepy when the snake is longer than a grown man and as big around as Mike Tyson's thighs. It turns out that the prospect of
being eaten by something can drive a pretty strong evolutionary phobia. Some
scientists even say that the reason our binocular vision is so acute is because
of growing up with—evolutionarily speaking—big snakes that could eat you.
John Voight’s binocular vision couldn't save him from being eaten—then regurgitated and re-eaten—by a mammoth snakein the 1997 movie Anaconda. |
Of course, anacondas don’t actually get that big. But they
get plenty big. The anaconda—a denizen of swamps and rivers of Central and South
America—is the world’s most massive snake, meaning it’s the heaviest but not
the longest.
What can I say? Men in groups like to carry huge anacondas around. |
Scientists debate the particulars, but the anaconda that takes the record was about 28 feet long, with a 44-inch circumference. What weight does that translate to? Probably about 500 pounds. Sheesh, that’d gobble up some serious human.
Of course, the majority of anacondas—even the
biggest—content themselves on a diet of fish and wetland mammals, because these snacks are much more abundant than humans, and maybe also because anacondas prefer
eau d’poisson over body odor. But could an anaconda occasionally eat a
human?
Who better to ask this question to than Dr. Jesus Rivas, who has been studying anacondas in the wild for 20 years?
Rivas says that there are no documented cases of anacondas eating humans, but that might be partly because anacondas, especially the big ones, tend to live in remote areas with few humans. However, he describes two cases in which his field assistants have been stalked—unsuccessfully, phew!—by their study animals. It was even caught on camera:
One thing is for certain: anacondas eat big stuff. Rivas has witnessed them eating white-tailed deer and crocodilians.
If your interest in anacondas is piqued, Rivas has written a book on them, coming out in 2013. In this book, he shares an account in which he himself was stalked by a 15-foot anaconda affectionately named Lina.
Rivas, J. A. 2013. Natural history of the green anaconda: Two decades disentangling the secrets of the world’s largest snake. Oxford University Press.
In the meantime, check out this video of a large female anaconda puking up a cow!
Who better to ask this question to than Dr. Jesus Rivas, who has been studying anacondas in the wild for 20 years?
Jesus Rivas examines a large female anaconda. |
Rivas says that there are no documented cases of anacondas eating humans, but that might be partly because anacondas, especially the big ones, tend to live in remote areas with few humans. However, he describes two cases in which his field assistants have been stalked—unsuccessfully, phew!—by their study animals. It was even caught on camera:
An anaconda stalks a scientist in the Venezuelan Llanos. www.anacondas.org |
One thing is for certain: anacondas eat big stuff. Rivas has witnessed them eating white-tailed deer and crocodilians.
An anaconda swallows a caiman. |
If your interest in anacondas is piqued, Rivas has written a book on them, coming out in 2013. In this book, he shares an account in which he himself was stalked by a 15-foot anaconda affectionately named Lina.
Rivas, J. A. 2013. Natural history of the green anaconda: Two decades disentangling the secrets of the world’s largest snake. Oxford University Press.
In the meantime, check out this video of a large female anaconda puking up a cow!
If anacondas are the heaviest snakes, what are the longest? Reticulated pythons from Southeast Asia take that trophy, uncontested. The longest recorded “retic” is about 33 feet—yes, that’s five or six people laid end to end. Burmese pythons and African rock pythons can exceed lengths of 20 feet and are also quite formidable predators. These python species along with a few others star in the smorgasbord of online images of snakes eating large prey items.
A python has eaten a sheep. |
A non-native Burmese python in the Florida Everglades ate an American alligator. The likely story is that the meal was too large and killed the snake, then scavengers noshed open the snake's belly. |
A python kills a cow. |
An olive python fixes to eat a wallaby. |
But, do pythons eat humans? Let’s start with rock pythons, which—despite their penchant for eating lots of birds and non-human mammals—definitely have been known to occasionally include a human in the picnic basket.
Wikipedia cites a number of fatal attacks, in which a rock
python killed a person but didn’t end up eating them. In at least two cases,
the pre-teen prey was too large to get down the hatch; in another case a farmer
was dragged up a tree by a python and rescued when he managed to call for help
on his cell phone. In a few cases, however, the python managed to gulp down
the prize: a 10 year-old was swallowed in 2002 in South Africa, and in the
1970’s a Portugese soldier was found inside the stomach of a snake.
A rock python has eaten a very large meal (not a human, however) and become stuck in a fence. |
A close-up of the fenced snake, just for the awesomeness of it. |
“After tracking pythons for many years and not experiencing anything like a predatory attack, I felt pretty confident that they just didn’t do it (and I told many people that pythons don’t attack people). However, that all changed towards the end of 2010 when I was tracking both pythons and Puff Adders. I had about 30 telemetered snakes going at one time and tracking took all the day light hours – and I was often pretty rushed trying to get to all the snakes in a day. On three separate occasions in that season I was bitten on the leg by large female pythons that were lying in ambush. In these cases I had been pretty sloppy – moving in on the signal way too fast under time stress and probably with less caution than I should have – and accidently walked past the snake. My interpretation was that the pythons had struck and bitten me because they thought I was a meal. In only one of these cases did the python start trying to constrict, but even this one released me as soon as it realized that I was not an impala – or that’s how it seemed. In the other two cases, the python bit and released immediately without initiating constriction. In all three instances I was on my own and got the fright of my life. The bite comes out of nowhere and really does take you by surprise. I can really imagine what it is like for a real prey item. And that probably gives the snake a very large advantage.
I am afraid that those are the only experiences that could possibly be predatory attacks. I still think that we are not really on the menu of Southern African Pythons, though they do get pretty large and do consume meals of up to about 50 kg.”
A rock python has swallowed a prey item much larger than the width of its head. |
Reticulated pythons, the longest species of snake alive, have munched on theirshare of people. Wikipedia lists a few instances of people being eaten by retics, some confirmed, some not: several people walking through the Malaysian bush got nabbed by 20+ foot pythons, including a Burmese jeweler in the early 1900’s who was eaten feet-first; plus a number of captive retics along with Burmese pythons have decided to eat their owners or their owners’ children.
The fact that it is the longest species alive today isn’t the only reason the reticulated python has notoriety among man-eating snakes. It holds the distinction of having had its man-eating tendencies studied thoroughly by an interdisciplinary team of scientists. A herpetologist (Harry Greene) got together with an anthropologist (Thomas Headland) and they found stuff out about man-eating snakes, stuff that neither would have been able to totally figure out on their own. Awesome.
and Hunter–gatherers and other primates as prey, predators, and competitors of snakes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 108:E1470-E1474.
They studied the Agta Negritas, a tribe that was still pre-literate in the Philippines as of the 1970’s. The Agta hunted reticulated pythons for their meat, netting 25kg+ of meat per snake.
Agta Negrita hunters in the Philippines pose with a 20+ foot-long reticulated python in 1970. |
So there you have it. Those are the records that we have of man-eating snakes in modern and ancient times. The numbers are small and the photos are few.
This is the point where I should hear some of you calling bullshit. What’s that you say? You’ve seen photos online of giant snakes eating people?
Take this photo of a large retic with a human-sized bulge captured in southeast Asia. Is this real? |
A reticulated python has noshed a teenage boy… or has it really? |
Except that the two snakes are clearly different animals. Whoops. I mean, who’s gonna notice a paltry detail like
that when faced with a human body being cut from a snake’s stomach?
Anyway, the question comes down to this: is this photo real?
Anyway, the question comes down to this: is this photo real?
Killer photo opp. You can tell the photo is faked because the boy's body is not covered in digestive goo, but also because of the presence of the large bag or piece of fabric between the boy's head and the snake's guts. |
I’ve saved the best for last. Here is a photo of one of the few allegedly real instances documented by photo in which a snake killed a human.
This unfortunate soul was killed by a reticulated python, but then the story goes that the meal was too big for the snake to take down—gobs of goo covered the man’s head but the snake couldn’t make it past his broad shoulders. |
So, could it happen to you? I've always thought it would be an interesting way to die. But our chances of being eaten by a giant snake, even when wading through a flooded plain in Venezuela or spelunking in the Philippines, are lower than the chances of being struck by lightning at the exact same time as winning Mega Millions.
Your chances might be a little higher if you encountered one of the beasts below coiled in the crook of an ancient swamp tree. At over 40 feet in length and weighing in at over a ton, Titanoboa—recreated by the awesome people at the Smithsonian—would definitely have noshed a few humans.
Smithsonian visitors view a scale model of Titanoboa. |
Good thing for us that we didn’t evolve for another 55 million years.
Author's note: If you can identify the photographer of any of these photos, have information about them, or have a good story or photos of a man-eating snake, please let me know (snakeymama@hotmail.com). I will update the blog post with new information.