Quote:
Originally Posted by TRD
There were some studies about the digestion of a crocodile by a large python (forgot which species exactly), it was surprising just how fast their digestion breaks the animal down. You could see the day to day progress on x-rays.
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I've just read it, it was a Burm. Sounds like snakes sometimes bite off more than they can chew!
"On one occasion a python was discovered to have burst open after having consumed an alligator in Florida 10 years ago. I is thought the alligator had managed to kick its way out of the python."
Another source (National Geographic) gives a different reason for the snake bursting open:
"... Florida is an unnatural environment for that snake species; it's not as warm as the snake's habitat in Southeast Asia. So the snake couldn't digest fast enough to keep the food from rotting. Once it started to rot inside the snake, the snake began to die. Its body split open because of that process, not because the croc was too large."
It's the internet, so believe whichever you choose!
This is also from an interesting article:
"The digestive enzymes of snakes are so powerful that they can dissolve bones and egg shells. However, hair, claws, insect shells, etc., are usually excreted by these animals."
https://www.buzzle.com/articles/how-...heir-food.html
It looks like snakes have a very thick-walled and muscular esophagus, stomach and small intestine, then a less muscular, thin-walled large intestine (anything sharp or spikey has probably been dissolved by that stage).
I also saw a video on YouTube where an African rock python regurgitated an antelope, resulting in its face becoming impaled on the horns. The snake managed to pull itself off and slither away, I'm not sure if it would survive after such an incident. The worst part is that the snake was trying to escape from the cameraman, left alone it would have safely swallowed the meal.
There was another report of a python dying after swallowing a porcupine, so I guess these things do happen from time to time.