Published February 15, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Gruesome twosome kukri rippers: Oligodon formosanus (Günther, 1872) and O. fasciolatus (Günther, 1864) eat Kaloula pulchra Gray, 1831 either by eviscerating or swallowing whole

  • 1. Unaffiliated, Køge, Denmark
  • 2. Loei Rajabhat University, Loei, Thailand
  • 3. Unaffiliated, Lantau Island, Hong Kong
  • 4. Unaffiliated, Udon Thani, Thailand

Description

Predation on adult microhylid frogs Kaloula pulchra by two closely-related colubrid snakes is described, based on two observations of Oligodon formosanus in Hong Kong and one observation of O. fasciolatus in Thailand. In two instances, O. formosanus was observed cutting open the abdomen of this anuran species. In one case, it performed repeated rotations about its own longitudinal body axis ("death roll") while its head was inserted into the frog's abdomen. The purpose of this behaviour was probably to tear off organs and swallow them. Once O. fasciolatus was observed catching and swallowing K. pulchra whole. In that case, the snake also made a series of rotations while it maintained its firm grip in the frog's belly. It is concluded that, for these two closely-related kukri snakes, prey size is crucial for determining whether the gape width allows large preys to be swallowed entire.

Files

Herpetozoa_article_62688.pdf

Files (2.3 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:f80484787f1b832295d057732d931035
2.3 MB Preview Download

System files (99.0 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:11f80d658f32bf3a15b497114c1c8ef9
99.0 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details