Showing posts with label Snake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Snake. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2011

Are Two Heads Snakes More Poisonous Than One?

A two-headed cobra has been born in China. Such anomalies among snakes are rare but they do happen. As far as anyone knows, this is the first incidence of such an occurrence with a cobra.


The owner of the snake is one Mr. Liu, a railroad worker who breeds snakes as a hobby. He bought 10 snake eggs to hatch at his home in Jiangxi province in eastern China.

He got the surprise of his life when he first saw the reptile, which is able to eat out of both sides of its mouth simultaneously.


“When the cobras hatched out, one of them had two heads. The cobra is able to eat using both of its mouths…Its four eyes were cloudy at birth, but that will change when the snake sheds its skin for the first time,” said Liu.

Snakes born two heads have been known to live up to 20 years in captivity, and Thelma and Louise, a two-headed snake that lived at the San Diego Zoo in California, had 15 offspring during her lifetime. Still, these snakes have many difficulties, and two heads aren’t better than one in this instance.


The major problem with this anomaly is that both snake heads have to decide they are hungry at the same time, and then they have to agree to pursue the same prey. Then they might fight over which head gets to swallow the prey.

To make matters even more complicated, since snakes operate by smell, if one head catches the scent of prey on the other’s head, it may attack and try to swallow its second head!

Snakes with two heads occur in the same way Siamese twins are born to humans. A developing embryo starts out normally as it begins to split into identical twins, but then for some unknown reason that process is interrupted part way, leaving the twins joined. Variations occur at the point the embryo ceases to separate, and snakes, just like Siamese twins, can be joined at the breast, hip or head.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

The boy with a snake tongue

13-year-old Xiao Xin, a Chinese boy from Daqing, excellent. No, the other languages he does not know how to translate the label and stamps on the envelopes are not moonlight. He was born with a snake's tongue, which splits at the tip. This allows him to use it as a cool tool. Proper use of his abilities, he has not yet found, and just entertaining friends.



Saturday, March 19, 2011

Snake Dies After Biting Model's Silicone Breasts

Last week, in an Israeli radio station promotion gone bad, model Orit Fox — who claims to have the largest breasts in the Middle East — was viciously bitten in one of her famous assets by the snake with which she was posing.



The snake wasn’t poisonous, and Fox got away with only a tetanus shot. The snake, however, wasn’t so lucky. It turns out that Fox became the largest busted women in the Middle East through less-than-natural means, and the poor serpent who bit her has now died of silicone poisoning.