How Do Snakes Mate? - podcast episode cover

How Do Snakes Mate?

May 13, 20227 min
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Episode description

Snakes have several fascinating reproductive tricks up their sleeves (scales?). Learn about the wild world of dual penises, delayed fertilization, egg incubation, and mating balls in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://animals.howstuffworks.com/snakes/how-do-snakes-mate.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, Lauren bog Obam here. You may have heard about the birds and the bees, and the flowers and the trees, But what about the snakes. How do snakes mate? Some species, including a few very big ones, can actually procreate without having sex. That's called parthenogenesis, and it's one of the many reproductive oddities will be exploring today.

To answer this question, we've got to make like a black mamba, one of the fastest living snakes, by the way, and cover a lot of ground. Welcome to the wild, weird world of dual penises, delayed fertilization, mama python incubators, and springtime mating balls. Okay, let's start with getting together. When snakes flick their tongues, they're picking up airborne chemical signatures like the pheromone trails made by singles in their area. Male garter snakes, how snakes, and racers have all been

observed trailing mature female snakes with this technique. The strategy doesn't always work. Sea snakes, for example, can easily lose track of a would be partner under water. Besides, pheromone trails naturally degrade with the passage of time, but when partners do meet, the courtship rituals can take on many forms. Paper about this subject describes chin rubbing, tail quivering, and coital neck biting. In numerous species, male snakes compete and

wrestle with each other for access to female snakes. For North American rat snakes, this can take on the form of each combatant rearing up and then trying to pin his rival's head to the ground. No snake has longer fangs, and the gaboon viper, whose venom dispensing teeth can grow over two inches or five centimeters in length. Come breeding season, the male snakes not only wrestle aggressively strike at one another. However, the snakes do this with closed mouths, keeping those infamous

fangs at bay. When it comes to actual intercourse. Two as a couple, but three or more isn't an unexpected crowd. A species like garter snakes, copper heads, and anacondas all form the occasional mating ball or breeding ball. These are writhing heaps created when several males all swarm over a single female in an attempt to mate. More than a

dozen participants may be involved. The reproductive organs of both sexes are housed in the cloaca, which is a multi purpose orifice located on the underside of a snake's tail. List serves as the excretory opening for the digestive system and for urine as well as the opening to the reproductive organs instant. Only male snakes and lizards have two penises apiece. These reptiles are endowed with a paired sex

organ called the hemy penis. There's a right hemmy penis and a left hemmy penis, each connected to one of the testicles. Only one penis is used during any given instance of intercourse, but that doesn't mean it's counterpart, never seasoning action. The second could very well come into play if the male finds himself a second mate shortly afterward. The hemy penis are often covered in little spikes or hooks.

These may enable the males to prolong sexual intercourse or to do a better job of hanging on to their partners, doing it not always an easy feat for lugless animals. Also to improve his chances of siring offspring, a male red sided garter snake, for example, will clog his partner's cloaca by secreting a thick gelatinous plug temporary barrier. The plug keeps his sperm from spilling out, and it blocks

rival males from leaving their sperm behind. A Meanwhile, female snakes can using pockets of folded tissue, keep sperm isolated but still liable inside their bodies for very long periods of time, proactively choosing when to let them fertilize her eggs. In two thousand five, a western diamond back rattlesnake who had been living alone in captivity, rendered herself pregnant and gave birth to a litter of offspring. To accomplish this, the mother reptile used sperm should held onto for about

six years. Sometimes male snakes aren't needed for reproduction at all. This has been observed in the green anaconda, which is the world's heaviest snake, weighing upward of four hundred and forty pounds that's two hundred kilos. Genetic testing reveals the female green anaconda can practice parthena genesis, impregnating themselves with

no male contact whatsoever. And Burmese pythons, those extra large snakes that have become notorious in recent years for successfully invading the Florida Everglades might be able to pull off the same feat. Here's a difference between pythons and anacondas though the former lay eggs while the ladder give birth to live young. Other live bearing serpents include rattlesnakes and garter snakes. Upon laying a fresh batch of eggs, a

mother python will wrap her body around it. That loving squeeze keeps the clutch from losing too much water and promotes healthy yolk development. Very frequently, the devoted parent remains coiled until the eggs hatch, and king cobra mothers painstakingly build nests for their eggs out of sticks and bamboo leaves, a unique behavior among snakes. The finished nests can be as big as four feet over one meter in diameter. Egg Sitting is one thing, but it's pretty rare for

snakes to take care of their actual babies. Female pit vipers thus deserve special recognition. Multiple species of these venomous reptiles are now known to watch over their newborn progeny for several days after the little snakes first come into the world. Today's episode is based on the article ever wondered how Snake's mate on how stuff Works dot Com, written by Mark Mancini. Brain Stuff is production of by Heart Radio in partnership with how stuff Works dot Com,

and it's produced by Tyler Klang. Before more podcasts in my heart Radio, visit the I heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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