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- From: tracer@carson.u.washington.edu (David P. Tracer)
- Subject: Re: Gratuitous Kills
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.091357.25181@u.washington.edu>
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: University of Washington, Seattle
- References: <=xfrb1#@lynx.unm.edu>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 09:13:57 GMT
- Lines: 37
-
- In article <=xfrb1#@lynx.unm.edu> smeagol@carina.unm.edu (Karl P.) writes:
- >
- > Anyone know why a full grown bullsnake might make a gratuitous kill?
- > I fed him a large mouse which he had some difficulty killing. He never
- > actually got a good bite in, instead he pinned down and crushed it. Then
- > he never went back to it.
- > Curious.
- >
- > Any ideas of why he may have done this or what it might mean?
- >
- >
- > ---Reverend Smeagol
- >
-
-
- I don't have experience with _P. m. sayi_, but I am the proud owner of 1.1
- _P. m. affinis_ which are closely related. Although these snakes are
- long-term captives, not at all skittish, and do not mind handling, they
- absolutely will not eat while being watched (unless the watcher can remain
- nearly 100% motionless).
-
- I bet that if you left the dead mouse in the cage, and had left the room
- for a good while, it might have eaten it.
-
- As far as pinning the mouse down rather than conventional constriction
- goes, this is not at all uncommon in the wild. Gopher/Bull snakes will
- frequently go down small rodent burrows and sometimes pin several animals
- down against the burrow walls.
-
- To offer a little more insight on why your snake left the mouse after
- constricting it, I'd need to know whether you were watching it/moving near
- the cage, whether the animal will typically eat with you watching, whether
- the animal is a long term captive or is in the process of acclimating, etc.
- But this is the best I can offer given the info in your posting.
-
- -David
-
-