Huge anaconda underwater. Is the anaconda dangerous for human life?

Anaconda (lat. Eunectes murinus ) is one of the most beloved modern monsters. Thanks to the American thriller of the same name, mentions of this huge, grayish-green, with brown spots, boa constrictor make the hair on the head quietly move even in people who have never seen (and will never see) it in person.

Anaconda is also called giant anaconda, common anaconda and a green anaconda. Europeans first heard about this representative of the pseudopod family in 1553 from the book “Chronicle of Peru” by Pedro Cieza de Leon. According to Pedro, the specimen he encountered was 20 feet (just over 6 meters) long and incredibly thick. The Spaniards, not without difficulty, killed the snake and found a whole one in its stomach.

Despite the fact that from time to time there are eyewitness accounts claiming to have seen an anaconda 10, 20, or even more meters, It is believed that average value this snake is 5-6 meters long, and the largest specimen lives in the New York Zoological Society - its length is 9 meters and weighs 130 kg. The question arises: even if they managed to raise such a monster in captivity, then what could it be like in its own natural environment- in an almost untouched tropical part South America?

Precisely because of the inaccessibility of its habitats, very little is known about the habits of the giant anaconda. Almost all the information was collected from observing these animals in zoos. It is also difficult to estimate their number in wildlife. However, apparently, this species is not in danger of extinction.

Anaconda lives in quiet river branches, lakes and creeks of the Orinoco and Amazon basins. This is where it watches over its victims: various mammals, young caimans, turtles and waterfowl. He eats fish very rarely, although he can easily catch it. The snake's lightning-fast reaction helps it grab unwary prey, which it wraps in rings and strangles, then swallows whole. At the same time, its mouth and throat stretch to incredible sizes.

The anaconda crawls out of the water extremely reluctantly, only to bask in the sun, hanging its huge body on the branches of coastal trees. During a drought, she either looks for a new place of residence, or buries herself in the bottom silt, where she falls into torpor and waits for the start of the rainy season.

Seasonal downpours, which begin in April-May, force male anacondas to seek meetings with females, who leave a specific smell on the ground during this period. When mating, males use rudiments of their hind limbs to mate with females. Pregnancy lasts 6-7 (according to some sources 9) months.

Anacondas are ovoviviparous; they give birth to from 28 to 42 baby snakes, a little more than half a meter long. On days 5-13 they have their first molt, after which the young begin to feed heavily. Often snakes themselves become victims of a variety of predators. This is how they grow until they reach such a size that no animal wants to measure their strength.

As for attacks on humans, only a few cases are reliably known. And even then it is believed that the anaconda did this completely by accident. Although it is unlikely that the true victims of the huge snake would be able to tell the world about their misadventures. So it is possible that the rumors about her are not so exaggerated...

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Coming from the city of Antiocha to Cartagena, when we settled it, Captain Jorge Robledo and others found so many fish that we killed with sticks whatever we wanted to catch... In addition, there are very large snakes in the thickets. I want to tell and tell about something reliably known, although I have not seen it [myself], but many contemporaries have met who deserve trust, and this is what it is: when, by order of the licentiate of Santa Cruz, Lieutenant Juan Creciano passed along this road in search of Licentiate Juan de Vadillo, leading with him several Spaniards, among whom were a certain Manuel de Peralta, Pedro de Barros, and Pedro Shimon, they came across a snake or snake, so large that it was 20 feet long, and very thick. His head is light red and his green eyes are terrifying, and since he saw them, he wanted to head towards them, but Pedro Shimon inflicted such a wound on him with a spear that even though he flew into [indescribable] rage, [still ] died. And they found in his belly a whole fawn, just as he was when he ate it; I will also say that some hungry Spaniards began to eat the deer and even part of the snake.

Appearance [ | ]

Anaconda is the most massive snake of the modern world fauna. The main color of the anaconda's body is grayish-green with two rows of large brown spots of round or oblong shape, alternating in a checkerboard pattern. On the sides of the body there is a row yellow spots smaller, surrounded by black rings. This coloration effectively hides the snake when it is hiding in calm water, covered with brown leaves and tufts of algae. The anaconda is not poisonous - its saliva is completely harmless to humans, although wounds from teeth can be very painful.

Dimensions [ | ]

There is a lot of information about anacondas longer than 6 meters, but none of this kind of observation is reliable. Thus, the famous Swedish naturalist Georg Dahl in his book “Wild Roads” (1969; Russian translation, 1972) talks about his capture of an anaconda 8.43 m long on the Guayabero River in the jungle of Colombia. Another Swedish naturalist, Rolf Blomberg, in his book “Giant Snakes and Terrible Lizards,” citing data from Clifford Pope, mentions an anaconda specimen 28 feet long, that is, 8.54 m. There is even a description of the capture of an anaconda 11 m 43 cm long in 1944 in Colombia. The length of the largest anacondas ever described in the literature (by P. Fawcett) is indicated as 62 feet (18.59 meters) and 80 feet (24.38 meters), which once again confirms the inconsistency of such statements.

According to official data, the largest female anaconda caught in Venezuela reached 5.21 meters in length and weighed 97.5 kg, despite the fact that at least 780 captured samples passed through the hands of scientists. Moreover, the smallest individual capable of reproduction was only 2.1 m, excluding the tail. The size of anacondas has been the subject of detailed research, which has led to the conclusion that maximum size, which can be achieved by the most large anacondas, will be approximately 6.7 m - this is slightly higher than the size of the largest samples that have fallen into the hands of scientists, but incomparable with unreliable and certainly greatly exaggerated data from the past.

Adult anacondas typically do not exceed 5 meters in length. Females are significantly larger and heavier than males - their length usually approaches 4.6 m, while males average around 3 m in length. Although the anaconda is somewhat shorter than some pythons, especially the reticulated python, it is much more massive: most adult female anacondas at 4.5 m in length will be comparable in weight to the extremely large reticulated pythons at around 7 m in length. The weight of adults has been reported to typically range from 30 to 70 kg. Thus, the anaconda is the heaviest snake of the world fauna and the second largest scaly one, slightly inferior in weight only to the Komodo dragon.

Range and problem of conservation of the species[ | ]

Due to the inaccessibility of the anaconda's habitats, it is difficult for scientists to estimate its numbers and monitor population dynamics. At least in the International Red Book, the conservation status of the anaconda is listed in the “threat has not been assessed” category ( English Not Evaluated, NE) - due to lack of data. But in general, apparently, the anaconda can still be considered out of danger. There are many anacondas in zoos around the world, but it is quite difficult for them to take root in captivity. The maximum lifespan of an anaconda in a terrarium is 28 years, but usually in captivity these snakes live 5-6 years.

Lifestyle [ | ]

Anaconda leads an almost entirely aquatic lifestyle. It lives in quiet, low-flowing river branches, backwaters, oxbow lakes and lakes in the Amazon and Orinoco basins.

In such reservoirs, the snake lies in wait for prey. She never crawls far from the water, although she often crawls out onto the shore and basks in the sun, sometimes climbing onto the lower branches of trees. The anaconda swims and dives well and can remain under water for a long time, while its nostrils are closed with special valves.

When a reservoir dries up, the anaconda crawls into another or goes downstream of the river. During the dry period, which occurs in some anaconda habitats, the snake buries itself in the bottom silt and falls into a stupor, in which it remains until the rains return.

Nutrition [ | ]

The anaconda feeds on various mammals, birds and reptiles, lying in wait for them near the water. It usually catches agoutis, waterfowl, iguanas and other small animals. Less commonly, larger individuals are capable of attacking peccaries, capybaras and caimans, but such large prey are not a common component of the diet. Anacondas often find turtles, tegus, and snakes for lunch - at least in the zoo, an anaconda once strangled and ate a 2.5-meter python. Fish occupies a much smaller place in the anaconda’s diet than the four-legged inhabitants of the jungle. Like all boas, the anaconda motionlessly waits for prey, lying in one place, and when it approaches, it grabs it with a lightning-fast throw and strangles it, entwining its body in rings (contrary to popular belief, the anaconda, like other boas, does not crush the victim and does not break its bones, but squeezes her and does not allow her to breathe, as a result of which she dies from suffocation). The anaconda swallows its prey whole, greatly stretching its mouth and throat. In Sao Paulo, Brazil, a 4.2 meter long, 94 kg anaconda killed and swallowed a 4 or 5 year old female puma weighing 42 kg, sustaining fatal injuries in the process. Frequent cases of cannibalism have been reported among anacondas.

Anaconda head

Predation [ | ]

Adult female anacondas have practically no enemies in nature; at times, however, they can become victims of pumas, jaguars, giant otters, Orinoco crocodiles and black caimans. Most often, anacondas are subject to predation by crocodile caimans, with which they occupy similar biotopes. Caimans usually prey on young caimans, as well as adult males weakened after mating, but in two recorded cases large (about 2 meters) males prey crocodile caimans became adult female anacondas about 5 meters long.

Subspecies [ | ]

These two subspecies were described a long time ago - in 1758 and 1801, respectively. They were distinguished by their color details and average sizes, which are slightly larger in the second subspecies.

It is currently believed that the giant anaconda does not form any subspecies.

Legends of the anaconda[ | ]

Often in the descriptions of various “eyewitnesses” information is given about anacondas of monstrous length. It was not only amateurs who were guilty of this information. The famous British traveler to South America P. Fawcett wrote about snakes of incredible size, one of which he allegedly shot with his own hands:

“We went ashore and approached the snake with caution... We measured its length as accurately as possible: in the part of the body that protrudes from the water, it turned out to be forty-five feet and another seventeen feet were in the water, which together amounted to sixty-two feet.

Its body was not thick with such a colossal length - no more than twelve inches ... Such large specimens as this one are not often found, but the tracks they leave in the swamps are sometimes six feet wide and testify in favor of those Indians who claim that anacondas sometimes reach incredible sizes, so that the specimen I shot must look like a dwarf next to them!.. I was told about a snake killed on the Paraguay River and exceeding eighty feet in length!” (62 feet = 18.9 m; 80 feet = 24.4 m; 12 inches = 30.5 cm)

Colonel Percy Fawcett (1867-1925), a famous expert on South America, who nevertheless left dubious descriptions of the anaconda

Now, without exception, all such stories are considered fiction (especially since Colonel Fawcett cited many other absolutely false information in his notes). Even the specimen with a length of 11.43 m, repeatedly mentioned in various sources, was not documented according to all the rules and is considered unreliable by most experts, especially considering the fact that the mass of this snake is indicated in the region of 200 kg, while an animal of this size should have weighed only a few less than a ton. In general, female anacondas do not often grow larger than 4 meters. It is very significant that at the beginning of the 20th century in the USA twice - once by President Theodore Roosevelt and the second time by the New York Zoological Society announced a prize of 5 thousand dollars for any snake more than 30 feet long (just over 9 m), but remained unclaimed.

A value greater than 8 meters for a snake is meaningless, at least from a purely biological point of view. Despite the fact that the anaconda occupies a slightly different ecological niche, even a 6-7-meter snake could defeat almost any herbivorous animal in the jungle. Too much a big increase will be energetically unjustified - in the conditions of a humid tropical forest relatively poor in large animals, it will be excessively big snake It simply won’t feed itself and it will be more difficult for it to hide from large predators.

Equally fantastic are the stories about the hypnotic gaze of the anaconda, which supposedly paralyzes the victim, or about its poisonous breath, which has a detrimental effect on small animals. The same P. Fossett, for example, wrote:

“...a sharp, foul breath came from her; they say it has a stunning effect: the smell first attracts and then paralyzes the victim.”

Nothing like this modern science, including taking into account the extensive experience of keeping anacondas in zoos, does not recognize it. However, the fact that the anaconda emits a strong unpleasant odor is reliable.

Anaconda and man[ | ]

Anacondas are often found near settlements. Domestic animals - pigs, dogs, chickens, etc. - often become prey for this snake. But the danger of the anaconda to humans, apparently, is greatly exaggerated. Isolated attacks on people are made by the anaconda, apparently by mistake, when the snake sees only part of a person’s body under water or if it seems to it that they want to attack it or take away its prey. The only reliable case - the death of a 13-year-old Indian boy swallowed by an anaconda - should be considered a rare exception. On the contrary, the anaconda itself often becomes prey for the aborigines. The meat of this snake is valued by many Indian tribes; They say that it is very good, slightly sweet in taste. Anaconda skin is used for various crafts.

Notes [ | ]

  1. Anaconda // Great Soviet Encyclopedia: [in 30 volumes] / ch. ed.

Scientists have expressed rather contradictory versions about the name of the anaconda. According to etymologists, the mammal takes its name from the word henakandaya, which means “ rattlesnake" Another version is that the reptile was named after a Tamil phrase meaning “killer of elephants.” So, where does this non-poisonous, but large, live? water snake? Its habitat is Paraguay, Colombia, Venezuela, tropical parts of South America.

Appearance

Anaconda belongs to the reptile class. This is a fairly large snake. The most giant reptile was found in Venezuela. Its length was 5 meters 20 centimeters, including the size of the tail. The anaconda weighed almost 98 kilograms. It should be noted that feature films about snakes of this species, 11-15 meters long, should be classified as fantastic.

There is one curious feature: the female anaconda is always larger than the male. consists of a body and a tail. The reptile's ribs are extremely mobile and expand greatly when swallowing large game. The anaconda's skull is distinguished by elastic bones, which helps it open its mouth wide when hunting. The anaconda does not break or crush bones, as other boas do; it compresses the prey so that oxygen cannot enter the lungs, and the prey dies from suffocation. This snake has no fangs, so it does not tear or chew its food.

Habitat and hunting

Where the anaconda lives, there are always many bodies of water. Typically, the snake chooses warm and humid areas. This is a water creature that inhabited the Amazon and Orinoco rivers. The snake lives especially comfortably in the area. It is believed that this zone is abundantly populated by such living creatures as anacondas, hummingbirds, and condors. Trinidad is an island of contradictions.

The territory is safely shared by small birds weighing 6-11 grams and large condors weighing 12 kilograms. If we talk about anaconda, we can distinguish the ordinary, green, Paraguayan and Benine. All listed species- excellent swimmers and divers. Special valves located on the nostrils help them stay under water for a long time.

When inhabited rivers and lakes dry up, the snakes migrate to other channels. After all, where the anaconda lives, there must be water. Sometimes the reptile buries itself in the mud before the onset tropical rains. Why does she need them? The fact is that in bodies of water it is easier to guard and capture prey. Most often it is a fish, a turtle, a bird. First, the water snake freezes and waits for its prey. Then, seizing the moment, it quickly attacks its prey and wraps itself around in a tenacious spiral. As soon as the living creature is strangled, the snake swallows it whole.

Tobago Island

It has the same amazing diversity of flora as Trinidad. There are cultivated coconut and sugarcane plantations here. The island is rich in its diverse fauna. It is home to possums and howler monkeys. This is another place where anacondas, hummingbirds and condors live.

Also in Tobago there is an abundance of alligators and various lizards, which have chosen the thickets of mangrove trees growing at the mouths of rivers. This place is also ideal for anaconda life.

Reptile breeding

Scientists have found that a water snake can go without food for several months in a row. But when the breeding season comes, she boycotts the hunger strike and goes in search of food. She needs to feed herself with food and find a male to mate with. It has been proven that only a well-fed anaconda can produce viable offspring. To attract a male, the reptile begins to exude a special pheromone. The partner looks for it with the help of his tongue. This is the case when he selects a female for himself “to taste.” How does mating happen?

It's difficult to answer exactly. What is known is that several males gather around the female and curl into a large ball. But with which of them the female mates is not always clear. After love games a pregnant reptile tries to find a body of water to escape the heat. After all, it is the scorching sun that always rules where the anaconda lives. Mainland South America is one such tropical place that is home to numerous species of famous snakes. Unfortunately, many of them die from drought.

Anaconda offspring

The female, who has successfully survived the heat and hunger strike for 7 months, will give the world her cubs with the onset of the first rains. One anaconda gives birth to approximately 30-40 babies. Along with the baby snakes, undeveloped eggs emerge from the female. For some time they serve as food for the anaconda. The mother snake does not worry about her cubs, as they are completely independent. After the birth of the anaconda, they explore with curiosity the world and go hunting. But while they are small, they often become victims of adult predators.

An anaconda versus a python in a fight will most likely win, unless, of course, it encounters the very long snake in the world, reticulated python. But here, too, her chances of winning are much higher, since she, although slightly inferior to him in length, is significantly superior in weight.

A large anaconda can also cope with a young crocodile. Of course, she cannot survive against an adult, massive, large specimen; in a fight with him, she will find herself in the role of prey. But he can handle a small crocodile without special labor, and therefore is quite capable of enjoying it.

The anaconda is a vertebrate animal from the class of reptiles, belongs to the genus of snakes from the subfamily of boas and lives in the tropical latitudes of South America. This snake feels great in fresh water, and therefore prefers to spend as much time as possible in aquatic environment, for which it received the name water boa. Since it belongs to the subfamily of boas, the snake is not poisonous: it strangles its prey.

Currently, the following types of anacondas have been discovered:

  • Giant - the largest snake in the world, more than five meters long, lives in tropical latitudes and settles in swamps and large rivers;
  • Paraguayan - length no more than three meters, lives in closed low-current reservoirs. In addition to Paraguay, it lives in Bolivia, Uruguay, Argentina and Brazil;
  • Deshauersea - lives in the northwestern part of Brazil;
  • Eunectes beniensis is a snake about four meters long, representatives of this species are similar to the Paraguayan anaconda and there is a high probability that in the future it will become its subspecies. It was discovered in Bolivia in 2002 and on this moment is under study.

Description

The anaconda is considered one of the largest representatives of the genus of snakes in the world: the length of the longest measured anaconda is 5.2 meters, and the weight is 97.5 kg (females are larger than males). There is a lot of information about larger specimens, whose size exceeds ten meters, but this data is not confirmed by anything, and is very doubtful. It is worth noting that the anaconda versus the reticulated python is inferior in length (according to the Guinness Book, the maximum length of a python is 9.75 meters), but still wins in terms of weight.

The anaconda has a greenish-grayish color with large brown spots of a rounded or oblong shape, which alternate in a checkerboard pattern (this color hides a hunting snake very well). Speaking about the anaconda, it is not without interest that it, like other snakes, sheds its old skin, but does this without leaving the reservoir: it rubs against its bottom.

Although anacondas practically cannot hear sounds, they have a very well developed nervous system, therefore various fluctuations in environment they feel with their whole body.

But as for vision, the snake periodically goes blind: instead of eyelids, there are motionless transparent scales on its eyes, which, when the snake begins to shed, become cloudy, blocking the view. Speaking about the anaconda, it should be borne in mind that, being a snake, it does not blink, so there is an opinion that it hypnotizes its prey.

Lifestyle

One of interesting facts The thing about the anaconda is that it is almost always in the water, and tries to go to the coast as little as possible: it swims excellently and is capable of staying under water for a long time, and in order not to suffocate, its nostrils close the valves during a dive. She prefers to swim in bodies of water either with a very calm current or without it at all.

The boa constrictor comes to the shore mainly to bask in the sun, and sometimes even climbs trees to do this. Speaking about the anaconda, it should be borne in mind that it moves like all snakes: the main role in this process is played by the tenacious scales located on the stomach, as well as the muscles of the body.


Once on land, the snake does not move far from the water, and if the reservoir dries up, it either moves to another, or goes down the river. If during a drought it is not possible to change the reservoir, the boa constrictor buries itself in the silt located at the bottom of the reservoir, after which it falls into torpor until the rainy season begins.

Nutrition

Like all boa constrictors, the anaconda is not poisonous: having attacked the victim, it embraces it “in an embrace” from which the animal rarely manages to free itself. Her grip is so strong that even one of the most formidable predators in the world, a crocodile is capable of becoming its victim (although an adult crocodile large species will get rid of the capture and, most likely, will eat it himself).

The largest snake in the world eats various reptiles and small mammals that come to drink. Usually these are rodents, turtles, waterfowl, and lizards. Larger individuals can eat capybaras, peccaries, medium-sized crocodiles (up to two meters); there is even a known case when big anaconda managed to eat a 2.5-meter python. They may well eat representatives of their own species.

Having smelled prey, the snake freezes in the water and becomes motionless. After the victim approaches, the boa constrictor pounces on it with lightning speed and strangles it, completely cutting off oxygen by immobilizing it chest, so the victim dies from suffocation.

After this, the snake eats it whole, greatly stretching its mouth and throat. Like all snakes, its mouth stretches very well with the help of an elastic ligament connecting the right and left side the lower jaw, which are connected to the skull by bones, the ends of which provide them with rotational movement. Thanks to this, the largest snake in the world is able to swallow an animal significantly larger than itself (for example, a young crocodile).

Reproduction

When talking about anacondas, it should be borne in mind that they are solitary animals, but when the mating period begins, they gather in flocks (this happens during the beginning of the rainy season). At this time, there are usually several males near one female and, just like other snakes, when mating they intertwine into a ball of several individuals.

The anaconda is ovoviviparous: it bears eggs inside the body, while the cubs mainly receive nutrition not from the snake’s body, but from the egg. Before being born, baby snakes leave the egg shell while still in the mother’s body. The female carries the cubs for about six to seven months and during this time she loses weight by almost half.

The female gives birth to from 28 to 42 cubs with a length of 50 to 80 cm, sometimes their number can reach up to a hundred. Immediately after birth, molting begins, so the baby snake does not eat anything at this time. When the molting ends, the baby is already able to swim, hunt, and feed on its own. At this time, small anacondas are extremely vulnerable and are eaten by birds, crocodiles and other predators.

Enemies of anacondas

If we talk about the anaconda, it is necessary to keep in mind that this boa constrictor is so strong that it has practically no rivals among snakes (an anaconda can easily withstand a fight against a python). Sometimes she may be attacked by a jaguar or large crocodile. A large individual is rarely attacked: the crocodile usually attacks and eats baby snakes or males weakened after mating. There were two recorded cases where an adult male crocodile managed to cope with female anacondas (such situations are the exception rather than the rule).

Despite the fact that the boa constrictor eats many mammals, rumors about the anaconda as a snake that feeds on humans are greatly exaggerated. A boa constrictor of this species rarely attacks a person (despite the fact that the boa constrictor is longer, the person is vertical in relation to the surface, and therefore she may consider him too large prey for herself).

There have been isolated cases of attacks on humans, caused by the fact that the snake sees only a part of the body that it can handle, or believes that they want to take food away from it. And then, she will attack a person sluggishly, reluctantly, rather trying to intimidate in the hope that he will leave. The only case where it is known for sure that an anaconda managed to eat a person is the death of an Indian teenager.

Since the snake lives in hard-to-reach, impassable places, even if there were cases of death, there was usually no one to record them.

It is man who is the most serious enemy for an adult anaconda: Indians hunt it for its skin, which is used for textiles and haberdashery, as well as meat. Hunting anacondas in the countries where they live is not prohibited, since it is believed that there are quite a lot of them and they give rise to numerous offspring. It is difficult to say exactly how many anacondas there are in the world, since they prefer to live in difficult places where the human foot steps as little as possible.

Giant anaconda called a water boa - not poisonous snake. The snake got its name from a Tamil word that appears with the word anaconda, means “killer of elephants”, but in Latin the translation is “good swimmer”. Etymologists believe that the rattlesnake made similar sounds, which is why it was called that. Where does such a snake live, what does it eat and how long does it live? This is what we will talk about.

Where does the anaconda live?

Length large snake is more than 5 meters, weight 97 kg or more. Scientists have found that anaconda 9 to 11 meters long - this is a myth, since its length does not exceed 6.5 meters. The snake's body is divided into a tail and a huge body with 435 vertebrae. Its ribs are mobile and allow it to swallow very large prey. Scull anacondas consists of movable bones connected to each other by ligaments. It is thanks to this feature that it opens its mouth wide and swallows its prey whole. Highly located eyes and nostrils allow you to breathe underwater. Its eyes allow it to quickly track prey rather than focus, thanks to transparent scales. Teeth giant anaconda, do not contain poison, although they are sharp and long, so the bite is not fatal to humans. An important organ of the snake is the tongue, which is responsible for taste and smell. The anaconda's skin is dry and dense, and all because it does not have mucous glands. But it is shiny, thanks to its scales. Its skin color is gray-green with yellow and olive undertones, and has black spots along its spine for camouflage.

Where does the giant anaconda live?

Because giant anaconda Spends most of its life in water and is an excellent swimmer; it lives in quiet river beds, swamps and river backwaters. She occasionally crawls ashore and climbs trees. From the drought anaconda buries itself in the mud and waits for the rains. You can meet such a snake throughout South America, in Brazil, Peru, Guiana, Paraguay, Guyana, Ecuador, Venezuela, Colombia, Bolivia.

How long does an anaconda live?


Anaconda can grow all its own life cycle, on early stage intensively, then the process slows down. Record how long you live giant anaconda, failed. It is known that 5-6 years snake lifespan on average, but a 28 year old snake was also found. Only God knows how long this monster can live.

ANACONDA FOOD, INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT ANACONDAS

What does an anaconda eat?

Giant anaconda hunting in the water or on the shore. She motionlessly waits for prey, then quite sharply pounces and wraps herself around the victim, strangling her. Her victim dies from suffocation, and not from broken bones. Sometimes, anaconda grabs prey with its teeth and swallows. Feeds turtles, swimming birds, iguanas, lizards, capybaras, peccaries, capybaras, agoutis, caimans, tupinanbis and even large snakes. They become prey and domestic animals such as cats, dogs and chickens. Anaconda for a long time may be without food because food takes several weeks to digest.


People were afraid anacondas and considered her a bloodthirsty snake, in fact, only one attack was recorded on a teenage boy from an Indian tribe.

People promised huge money for giant anaconda 9 meters, but its length is no more than 6 meters 70 cm.

In America, anaconda was the best and scariest character for films.

Anaconda does not know how to paralyze the victim with his gaze! They can only put you into a stupor from their wild smell.

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IN THIS VIDEO YOU WILL SEE WHAT GIANT ANACONDAS LOOK LIKE AND WILL LEARN A LOT OF INTERESTING THINGS

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