Why Can a Mongoose Take on a Cobra? - podcast episode cover

Why Can a Mongoose Take on a Cobra?

Feb 07, 20204 min
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Episode description

Mongooses are small, weasely mammals that can -- and do -- kill and eat big, venomous king cobras. Learn how they manage to come out on top in this grudge match in today's episode of BrainStuff. 

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, Lauren bog Obam Here. There aren't very many animals out there that could fight a king cobra and eat it for dinner, but a mongoose is one of them. Before we go any further, let's talk about mongooses in general. Have you ever seen a mongoose? There are twenty nine species of them, and not all of them look the same, but they are all long bodied, short eared, sort of

weasily looking animals. They aren't very closely related to weasels, though. If you're an animal in the order Carnivora, which is the order of mammals that are mostly carnivorous and have teeth adapted for flesh eating, you can either be on team dog or team cat. Weasels are related to dogs, and however much mongooses look like weasels, they are firmly on team cat. In fact, a mere cat is a type of mongoose, and cat is right there in its name.

Mongoose is living colonies, and most species live in Africa, although one species, the Javan mongoose, has been introduced to Europe and has also wreaked havoc and ecosystems all over the world, especially on islands like Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and Jamaica. Although mongooses are small, they're bright, feisty, and what scientists call non discriminatory predators. That is, if they can catch it or kill it, they'll eat it up to and including venomous snakes, and an animal like that can do

a lot of damage on an island. But how can it be that a skinny mongoose can take on one of the most venomous snakes in the world, like the hulking king cobra, whose venom can kill an adult human and around thirty minutes. The grudge match was popularized in red Yard Kipling's short story Ricky Tiki Tavy, But that's not the only time a mongoose has contributed to popular culture.

A Hindu fable about a mongoose in a snake dates back to at least three hundred b C. And in the nineteen thirties Only on the Isle of Man claimed a talking mongoose named Jeff spelled Gef by the way, lived in their walls by turns, threatening them, protecting them, killing rabbits for their dinner, and telling them jokes. The story became a tabloid sensation, and the paranormal investigation that resulted is the subject of a recent book called Jeff,

The Strange Tale of an extra Special Talking Mongoose. In the real world, a few specialized traits have allowed mongooses to add venomous snakes to their list of entrees. First starters, mongooses are quick and agile, and have strong jaws and thick hides to block those pointy cobra fangs. They also don't mind rushikan cobra, which is, in spite of its size and extravagantly toxic venom, actually very shy and uninterested

in tangling with anybody. If King Cobra's made lists, humans and mongooses would be at the very top of these snakes avoid list. But mongooses have another advantage body chemistry. It's not impossible bowl for a mongoose to get sick or even die from a cobra byte, but their bodies make a glycoprotein that binds to the proteins in cobra venom, so a moderate amount of snake venom won't hurt them. They are fascinating creatures mongooses, but best left to their

own devices. If you live in the United States, you definitely can't have one as a pet. They are prohibited animals in every state except Hawaii, where they've been upgraded to the designation of dangerous invasive species. Islands really are delicate ecosystems. In Hawaii, even the decidedly less bitey hummingbird is prohibited because of the havoc it could wreak on pineapple pollination. Today's episode was written by Jesselyn Shields and

produced by Tyler Clang. Brain Stuff is production of iHeart Radio's How Stuff Works. For more on this and lots of other topics, visit our home planet, how stuff Works dot com. And for more podcasts from my heart Radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or where every sen to your favorite shows.

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