

There have been reports of people being eaten by reticulated pythons, particularly on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi. The pythons’ jaws are also connected by very flexible ligaments, allowing them to stretch around large prey and swallow them whole. They kill their prey by wrappingaround and constricting them. Native to South and South-east Asia, reticulated pythons are non-venomous.
LARGEST ANACONDA ON RECORD FULL
The National Aquarium's new resident, Super Snake, requires 12 people side by side to lift her full length. She weighs a whopping 115 kilograms, enjoys a diet of ducks and rabbits and is an excellent swimmer. It takes 12 people to hold this extraordinary reptile at full length. And at seven metres long, Super Snake is one of the largest on display in the world. Reticulated pythons are the longest snake breeds in the world, regularly reaching more than 6.25 metres long, with the largest yet recorded to be 10 metres (about the size of a school bus).

The National Aquarium at Al Qana has just announced that it is now home to Super Snake, a 14-year-old female reticulated python. Stop by the Aquatic & Reptile Center and check out magnificent Olive – we’re thrilled she’s here!įun fact: Though anacondas are great swimmers, they’ll also hang from branches to dry off.Abu Dhabi has a new resident, and she’ll be slithering her way into hearts soon enough. (Green anacondas don’t lay eggs they give birth to live young, about 1 to 2 feet long.) She was named by children at the Henry Vilas Zoo School. Olive was born at the Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium, along with 28 other snakes at the time. After Mo passed, leaving an open, anaconda-appropriate exhibit, MCZ and Henry Vilas began to brainstorm. The Madison zoo also had another green anaconda, and over the years, realized that their habitat wasn’t offering both snakes the space to express their natural behaviors. MCZ was glad to collaborate with Henry Vilas on the transfer of one of their largest reptiles. The animal care team will also need to first assess whether Olive views any potential co-inhabitant as prey. Before a red-tailed boa moves back in, additional climbing structures will need to be added for them. A red-tailed boa (one of three at MCZ) also shared the habitat but was moved off exhibit when Olive arrived. Olive resides in the habitat previously occupied by anaconda Mo, who was humanely euthanized due to longstanding medical issues last February at the age of 25. She also comes out of the water at night – zookeepers can tell because plants have been knocked over when they check on her the following morning.

During the week, when attendance at MCZ is a little quieter, you might find Olive sitting with her head elevated two to three feet out of the water. The animal care team is able to clean the habitat under her watchful eye at a distance, but she becomes a bit “livelier” if she requires a physical move. MCZ follows a large constrictor protocol, and at her current size, three zookeepers must be present when they’re working with Olive or in her habitat. At MCZ, Olive is currently on a bit of a weight-restricted diet, consuming one frozen rabbit a month. They are the heaviest snakes in the world, reaching up to 500 pounds and 30 feet long. Found from the wilds of the Amazon rainforest to the forests of Central America, green anacondas will eat mammals including deer, monkeys, and capybara, as well as birds, fish, and turtles. The anaconda may also simply hold its prey under water until drowning it. A swift bite holds their prey while several loops coil around the prey’s body, immediately restricting its breathing. Anacondas are also ambush hunters and true constrictors. They’re excellent swimmers and known to drift in river currents as a convenient way of locomotion.

Green anacondas are known as “water boas,” able to stay submerged in water for over ten minutes.
