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- Newsgroups: rec.pets.herp
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!linus!progress!gerard
- From: gerard@progress.COM (Gerard Bras)
- Subject: Re: Gratuitous Kills
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.173642.21891@progress.com>
- Sender: usenet@progress.com (Mr. Usenet)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: tahiti
- Organization: Progress Software Corp.
- References: <=xfrb1#@lynx.unm.edu> <s0499528.48.0@let.rug.nl> <Bzq0L8.60I@news.iastate.edu>
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 17:36:42 GMT
- Lines: 26
-
- pholland@iastate.edu (Paul J Hollander) writes:
-
-
- >I don't know why, but I saw the same thing in my first Burmese python, a
- >rather picky feeder. Give him a black rat, a hooded rat, and a white rat,
- >and he'd take the black first, the hooded next, and then think about the
- >white. I can't see smell having anything to do with it, as they were out of
- >the same colony. I wonder if the snake would still differentiate between
- >mice of different colors if the mice were dead and it was fed in a totally
- >dark box. Experiment.
-
- I've seen this also, and not just in pythons. I suspect srongly that snakes
- can in fact tell the difference and that scent is the que. They have an extremely
- well developed olfactory sense so I don't think it's unreasonable to believe they
- can make distinctions which are lost on us. In any case I've seen this enuf to
- believe it's pretty common.
-
- Am I correct in thinking that white rodents are man-made strains? If so, is it
- possible that along withdifferent pigmentation they also smell different. If you
- want to hypothesize wildly, it may even be that snakes can actually detect the
- pigmentation in the rodents skin.
-
- cheers,
- gerard
-
-
-