BloodyBaroness
Captain Titsworth
Baroness, these are very convincing pictures, especially the boa. It might just be my perception, but the snakes in all those pictures including the boa look very skinny, despite the bulges of where other snakes have been ingested. I know some of the snakes are younglings, and they are usually skinny, but this is not normal behavior for boids to eat other reptiles. If it were a king snake or an indego snake it wouldn't surprise me. I wonder if the snakes were underfed?
The boa was simply housed with another. It was fed on a normal schedule with appropriate sized food, and decided one day to eat the other for no apparent reason. Maybe it got tired of "cuddling." :shrugs:
Those snakes don't really seen skinny, it's an optical illusion because the food bulges are so massive.
I personally have had issues with hatchlings trying to eat each other while they were in a bin to be sexed. They were all clutch mates and had just finished their first sheds. They were in a large tub together while I sexed and labeled each one to be placed in a tub by itself. One of them tried to constrict and consume another, then two more started doing it.
I also have an employee that housed a bull snake and a gopher snake together. Both died from what looked to be fight wounds that turned septic. She also had a king eat a corn. After she told me what happened I went over proper husbandry with her. She no longer cohabs anything, not even the same species of snake.