A big gulp for a little snake

The Gans' egg-eater can swallow the biggest prey relative to its size of any snake

Pythons have huge appetites, but which snake around the world would win an eating contest?

Surprisingly, it’s a harmless little African snake that consumes eggs whole.

Biologist Bruce Jayne at the University of Cincinnati discovered that the Gans' egg-eater, or Dasypeltis gansi, can consume bigger prey relative to its own length and mass than even Burmese pythons, among the most massive snakes on Earth.

“They probably would hold the Guinness world record,” said Jayne, a professor of biological sciences in UC’s College of Arts and Sciences.

“It’s spectacular but on a small scale,” he said. “People focus on big snakes eating big things, but if you correct for their size, these little guys are pretty scary.”

The study was published in the Journal of Zoology.

UC biologist Bruce Jayne discovered an all-time eater in the animal kingdom, the African Gans egg-eating snake. Relative to its size, this unassuming, non-venomous snake can consume bigger prey than any other snake on Earth.

UC Professor Bruce Jayne discovered that an African egg-eating snake can swallow bigger prey relative to its size than even a Burmese python. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand

How it eats

The Gans’ egg-eating snakes grow to about three feet long. Named for herpetologist Carl Gans, the egg-eater is skinnier than many egg-loving snakes found in the United States such as the yellow rat snake, which is known to pillage chicken coops.

UC biologist Bruce Jayne discovered an all-time eater in the animal kingdom, the African Gans egg-eating snake. Relative to its size, this unassuming, non-venomous snake can consume bigger prey than any other snake on Earth.

UC biologist Bruce Jayne holds a rat snake in his lab. Like the Gans' egg-eater, yellow rat snakes eat eggs. But the African snake can wolf down far bigger ones for its size. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand

But thanks to stretchy skin between its left and right lower jawbones, the Gans’ egg-eater has the ability to consume eggs many times larger than its head.

“They can consume prey three to four times bigger than snakes that are generalists such as the black rat snake,” Jayne said.

The egg-eater consumes the egg whole and contorts its spine to crack it, releasing the gooey contents, before regurgitating the empty, broken shell. Rat snakes, by contrast, typically digest the egg, shell and all.

Burmese pythons are no slouches when it comes to eating big meals. In previous studies, Jayne found that adult pythons can consume deer weighing more than 70 pounds and alligators 100 pounds or more. Still, the little egg eater can consume prey with a cross-sectional area more than twice that of a Burmese python of similar weight.

Others such as the rat snake, queen snake, brown tree snake and western diamondback rattlesnake don’t even come close to the egg-eater.

UC biologist Bruce Jayne discovered an all-time eater in the animal kingdom, the African Gans egg-eating snake. Relative to its size, this unassuming, non-venomous snake can consume bigger prey than any other snake on Earth.

A quail egg is a snack for a Gans' egg-eater, which can swallow whole eggs even bigger than this one in a UC biology lab. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand

Jayne said the superpower is an effective survival strategy. Most bird eggs are nearly spherical, like a Ping-Pong ball. Birds, mice and rats are elongated, providing more calories than an egg of the same circumference.

But the Gans’ egg-eater compensates by being able to swallow far bigger eggs for its size, Jayne said.

A snake spits out a broken eggshell.

After swallowing the egg whole, the Gan's egg-eater contorts its body to crack it and spits out the empty shell. Photo/Bruce Jayne

“One likely reason this extreme gape evolved in African egg-eating snakes is that they specialize on a prey shape with a modest amount of mass per cross-sectional area,” Jayne said. “That puts a premium on having a wide mouth.”

As a specialist, the Gans’ egg-eater has evolved a soft mouth with precious few teeth, which could interfere with gripping a smooth-shelled egg.

The harmless snakes defend themselves against predators by mimicking venomous saw-scaled vipers, Jayne said.

“They put on quite a show, making a hissing sound by rubbing their scales together. They’ll flatten their heads and strike,” Jayne said. “It’s comical because it’s all bluff. They’re toothless wonders.”

Featured image at top: A Gans' egg-eater swallows an egg whole in a UC biology lab. Photo/Bruce Jayne

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