The Indian Rock Python
Non-venomous

Average length: 7-14 feet

Photos:
http://picasaweb.google.com/GoanetBlog/Environment#5416065925369771586
http://picasaweb.google.com/GoanetBlog/Environment#5416065921248527250


The Indian Rock python I’m called to rescue is usually guilty of entering 
chicken 
coups and swallowing our egg machines. Bigger ones will take larger animals – I 
was 
once called to capture one that had attempted swallowing a kid (baby goat 
really!)

Really huge pythons take still bigger animals – a friend of mine captured one 
that 
had tackled a fully grown goat, and another that had killed an adult monkey up 
in 
the trees. Analysis of stomach contents of these huge snakes reveal a bizarre 
diet; 
frogs, toads, monitor lizards, birds, rodents, fruit bats, jackals, civets, 
deer, 
wild boar, hare, porcupine and langur. Some have even been known to take 
leopards!

Yet they really pose no threat to humans. In fact, they rid us of a great deal 
of 
pests such as rats and bandicoots.

Pythons are not very fast movers and they must therefore get very close to 
their 
prey if they are to catch it. Heat sensitive pits located on upper lip scales 
help 
them locate warm blooded prey in pitch darkness.

They also have an unusual style of locomotion which helps them stalk prey 
without 
giving their own position away. This method of movement is called rectilinear 
movement and looks very similar to the movements of a millipede (except of 
course 
that pythons unlike millipedes are lacking in legs). The snake produces waves 
of 
contraction which pass along the length of its body helping it propel forward 
without needing anchorage at the sides of its body.

When stalking prey they can move very slowly. In fact you only notice that the 
snake 
has moved if you close your eyes or look away for a few seconds. The mottled 
design 
on the snake’s body breaks the body outline of the snake hiding it efficiently 
on 
the ground or in dry leaves. The camouflage of the snake is completed by two 
commando stripes drawn along the face (one of them runs right through the eye!)

Once this constrictor gets close enough to its prey it will strike with 
lightning 
speed.  The snake grabs it by biting it and in the same instant loops two to 
three 
coils around its victim’s struggling body. Once the coils are secure the snake 
may 
move its own vulnerable head away till the animal suffocates and dies. The 
entire 
process of biting the prey, anchoring the coils and moving the head away 
finishes in 
milliseconds leaving most people with the impression that pythons cannon bite 
and 
are only capable of coiling around their prey.

Prey such as chickens and rats take only a few minutes to suffocate. Once the 
snake 
is sure that the animal is dead, it releases its coils and starts sniffing 
around 
with its tongue to locate its victim’s head. Imagine being able to tell the 
head of 
an animal from its body just by its smell! Prey is always swallowed head first 
and 
while still warm (dead animals harden and become difficult for a snake to 
swallow 
when they go cold).

I have watched pythons stalk, capture, suffocate and then swallow massive 
bandicoots. What’s never fails to amaze me is how pythons can swallow animals 
at 
least three to four times the size of their own head.  Skin stretches, jaws 
separate 
and joints dislocate until halfway down swallowing the meal the snake’s head 
resembles more a vacuum cleaner bag than the reptile head it’s supposed to look 
like! Four to five days later the only trace of the bandicoot is a small clump 
of 
hair in the snake’s excreta!

Interesting facts about Indian Rock Pythons

1. Both males and females have a spur (claw) on each side of the anal scale. 
These 
are believed to be vestigial hind limbs. The spurs on the male snake though are 
much 
larger and are still used by it to simulate the female while mating.

2. Female pythons may lay up to a hundred eggs. They remain coiled around them 
for 
60-80 days and are sometimes observed to shiver while doing so; these muscular 
body 
contractions raise temperature a little to help incubate the eggs.


Rahul Alvares


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