A humongous reticulated python measuring 26.2 feet (8
meters) long was captured at a Malaysian construction site last week, but the
snake died three days later while laying an egg, news sources report.
The Malaysian snake was longer than five grand pianos (each
piano is about 5 feet, or 1.5 m long); a pickup truck (those are about 19.3
feet, or 5.8 m) and almost as long as an adult giraffe standing on the head of
another giraffe (giraffes are about 14 feet tall, or 4.3 m).
It's also longer than Medusa, the longest captive snake on
record,according to Guinness world record. In October 2011, Medusa, a
reticulated python (Python reticulatus), measured 25.1 feet (7.67 m) at
her home in Kansas City, Missouri, Guinness World Records reported.
People spotted the enormous serpent at an overpass
construction site in Paya Terubong, a district on the island of
Penang, the Guardian reported. Construction workers immediately called
emergency services on Thursday (April 7); authorities worked for 30 minutes to
capture the roughly 550-pound (250 kilograms) beast, the Guardian reported.
Reticulated pythons, which are native to Southeast Asia, are
the longest snakes in the world, said Stephen Secor, a professor in the
Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Alabama, who wasn't
involved with the Malaysian snake's capture. These snakes are indeterminate
growers, meaning they continue growing indefinitely, although they typically
grow at a slower rate in old age, he said.
Reticulated pythons are also slender, so they're
not the heaviest snakes, and Secor doubts that the 550-lb. measurement is
accurate. An anaconda might weigh that much, but not a reticulated python,
hesaid.
For example, even though Medusa was just 1.1 feet (0.33 m)
shorter than the new record holder, she weighed 350 lbs. (about 159 kg) in
2011, or a whopping 198 lbs. (90 kg) less than the newly caught snake. Those
numbers don't add up, especially because Medusa is a captive snake and doesn’t
have to actively hunt for food in the wild, so she's probably heavier than most
reticulated pythons, Secor said.
Mysterious death
Secor is also intrigued that the snake died after laying an
egg on Sunday (April 10). A snake that could easily lay 75 eggs at
one time, hesaid. Perhaps the snake was laying eggs, and one egg got lodged
inside of its body when captured. Snakes have two oviducts (structures that
pass eggs), but a lodged egg can block the other eggs that have yet to be laid.
The blockage can cause medical problems, sometimes even death, he said. But not
always — lodged eggs can also be reabsorbed into the body, Secor said. [Shocking
Snake Stories]
Or, maybe the python was just starting to lay egg
when it died. A necropsy (an animal autopsy) would clear up matters, as a
pathologist or other doctor would be able to see whether more eggs were left
inside of the snake, he said.
Alternatively, the snake could have died because it was
traumatized from its capture, Secor said. "I don't know why the snake
died," he said. "It probably didn't die because it laid an egg."
Though dead, the specimen could still be used to educate the
public. For instance, a taxidermist could preserve the serpent, or its skin
could be put on display at a museum, Secor said.
Python skins are often saved, but this makes it hard to
officially measure them afterward, as skins can be stretched. It's also hard to
measure pythons because of all the kinks, or bends, in their bodies. Even so,
larger snakes may exist in the wild; In 1912, people reported that a 32-feet-long
(10 m) python was discovered in Indonesia, the Guardian said.
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