Author: Sarah Zielinski / Source: Science News for Students

Studying the diet of snakes isn’t easy.
The animals are elusive. They don’t feed all that often. And it probably doesn’t help that some are deadly. So perhaps it’s not much of a surprise that scientists hadn’t realized how common one snack is for southern African cobras. But once they started looking, researchers realized that cobras eating each other — cannibalism — happens far more than anyone had thought.Bryan Maritz is a herpetologist, or reptile biologist. He works at the University of the Western Cape, in Bellville, South Africa. He hadn’t set out to study cobra cannibalism. His team had been conducting a study in the Kalahari Desert. They were looking at two species of snakes: cape cobras and boomslang. Social weavers are birds. “The snakes raid these huge colonial social weaver nests and eat all the chicks and eggs,” Maritz notes. The researchers wanted to understand better how the two species use the bird nests. As part of their study, they were looking for snakes that they could implant with radio transmitters.
One day this past January, while searching for snakes, the researchers got a radio call. A tour guide told them where to find a pair of large yellow snakes engaged in a fight. Thinking those yellow snakes might be cape cobras, the team raced over. They didn’t find a snake fight. One large cape cobra was swallowing a smaller one. “Instead of capturing two potential study animals, we found one well-fed study animal, now known as NN011,” Maritz and his colleagues write in a paper published October 1 in Ecology. They nicknamed the snake Hannibal.
This wasn’t the first documented sighting of a cannibal cobra. However, scientists had never thought such behavior was common. “The total number of observations of cobras eating in the wild isn’t a big number,” Maritz says. “And the observations of cannibalism in the wild are even rarer. So I think it’s easy to dismiss as a one-off thing.”
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