Exhibit design and collection planning are some of my favorite aspects of zoo work, and the ability to participate in these projects are what really drove me to seek advancement in the field. It seemed like all of my hopes paid off when, at one small zoo, the director asked me to assist in the design of a new reptile house. Sure, the footprint was locked and it was small, the staff was small so I was limited in how many exhibits I could fit, and the budget was hardly expansive. Still, I did have free rein (within reason) to pick species for it. I was only given one clear directive – “I want a big ass snake,” the director said. “Big ass.”
Large constrictors are some of the true stars of reptile collections, and it’s not a surprise that almost every zoo – even those with the smallest of reptile collections – manage to find room for an exhibit (or at least an exhibit… sometimes it’s debatable if there truly is “room” or not). Today, I’ll look at the big pythons. I’ve worked with reticulated pythons at 1 AZA, 1 non AZA, Indian rock python at 1 AZA, Burmese python at 1 AZA and 3 non AZA, and African rock python at 1 non AZA (African rocks are sometimes split into two species, so no idea which one it was at the time). We’ll look at boas another time (though much of what I say here applies to them as well).
The most common question visitors often ask about working with snakes is what and how do we feed them (followed, usually, by “can they watch?). Diet at most of these zoos consisted of rabbits or chickens, with some of the smaller specimens I’ve worked with still on rats (outside of a reptile breeder expo, I’ve never seen a very young individual of any of these species). The AZA zoos invariably fed pre-killed prey, usually purchased frozen from Rodent Pro or some such vendor. One non-AZA fed their Burmese frozen/thawed as well. The other two usually fed live. And not just any live – a keeper would go to the rabbit hutch or chicken coop exhibits and select an animal (sometimes we’d all go and argue about who to feed out to make sure no one’s favorite rabbit or chicken was fed) – in the case of the chickens, there was almost always a particularly mean rooster than no one was sorry to see go. Stillborn goat kids or lambs were also fair game for snake food.
This was in my younger days, and these days I’m much less in favor of feeding snakes live prey, unless it’s needed to jumpstart the appetite of an animal that’s been doing poorly. Live feeding in some cases – such as fish in a pool, or insects, can provide enrichment and exercise for some animals, while providing live prey for animals slated for reintroduction is good practice of the basics of catching and killing prey. Putting live prey in with a python today just strikes me as lazy and sensationalist. A warm prey animal (towards the end of my time there, I took to dispatching the prey animal myself prior to feeding it to save it from unnecessary trauma and, in the case of rodents, risk of injury to the snake) and a good pair of sturdy tongs will achieve the same effect for the snake, behaviorally and nutritionally.
The resultant snake poops, of course, were massive, with black boluses that reminded me of pool balls and clump of white urate. They also smelled pretty foul, which made one grateful that snakes don’t poop that often. The big snakes ate every other week or so, slowing down in cool weather, even though we tried to keep their habitats at consistent temperatures.
We also got asked a lot of questions about safety. Working with large pythons poses a safety risk, and it’s important to take precautions. As a rule, I wouldn’t work a snake longer than 8 feet by myself without someone in the room for backup. After that, an extra person for every 5 feet of snake or so (it’s an estimate, not a science, and is in part driven by the snake in question). In the event of a bite, it’s important not to pull, because the recurved teeth of the snake will tear in. I’ve heard some people use a spatula to slide the teeth out – others will use a bucket of water, submerging the snake’s head until it releases to breathe (I once walked in on a colleague who was sitting in a chair reading a magazine casually while his one hand was in a nearby bucket, a particularly truculent Puerto Rican boa latched into it). If the snake throws coils around you… well, this is where the buddy system comes in handy. You may have heard how the muscles that close the jaws of a crocodile or alligator are very strong, but those that open them are very weak, and one person can easily hold the mouth of an alligator shut? It’s similar with large snakes – the musculature of the coils works in one direction. Struggle with the head, you’ll get nowhere. Take the snake by the tail, and it unwraps very easily. Also a useful trick for moving a snake that’s tightly griped on a branch – just unwrap the tail.
I’ve only ever been involved in one large python bite, and it wasn’t me who was bitten. I was cleaning a reptile house at a non-AZA with one new keeper (the same luckless sod who was with me cleaning the condor exhibit when I got bitten, actually) – he was in a Burmese python exhibit, I was prepping some tortoise salads, when I heard him – quite calmly – call for me. I walked over, and he was standing in the middle of the exhibit, with a Burmese python latched onto his calf muscle (no constriction). I walked in, took the snake behind the head, pushed forward, and the teeth slipped off. For a while this keeper was sporting a pattern of tooth marks on his calf in the outline of the snake’s gap – he talked about getting them tattooed, but they were fairly shallow bites, and healed up quickly.
Such bites are very uncommon, and Burmese pythons are excellent ambassador animals – even (or especially) the big ones. Burmese and Indian rocks are both very calm snakes in my experience, easily handled. When going to pick one up, I’ve always approached towards the back, away from the head, then stroked/patted the snake’s side to let it know I’m there. If a snake clenches up or jerks, to me that’s an indication that it’s not up for handling. Then, I pick it up, starting a little further back, but sliding up until I’m near the head, which I support, but don’t grip too tightly, while other keepers support the rest of the snake (I’ve noticed a major difference in handling arboreal vs terrestrial snakes – terrestrial snakes really like more support and don’t like to feel like their dangling, whereas smaller arboreal species will play through your hands like branches). In ambassador situations, we’d put the snake outside and let visitors approach, and, if they wanted, touch the snake (avoiding the head and the tail – many snakes seem ticklish around the tail, and no one wants their cloaca touched, of course).
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Education program with a smaller Burmese python - albinos of this species are very common and are very popular as exhibit and ambassador animals.
During one of these education talks in the rural south, I almost got myself in deep trouble when I was talking to a religious school. I showed them the underside of the python, including the residual spurs on either side of the cloaca, and mentioned how snakes had legs, and that these were the remnants. Of course, once the dreaded "E" word (evolution) popped up, many of the parents and teachers begun to hurry away.
Burmese pythons are such chill snakes that, regrettably, there's a tendency for keepers and educators, especially newer ones (thank you Dunning-Kruger effect) to be a little fast and loose with them, acting like they are props, rather than animals, and a little too fond of the shock value (think Britney Spears dancing with her snake).
Reticulateds are less friendly, more nervous than Burmese and Indian rock, in my experience, as well as more active and twitchy. The single African rock I worked with was a monster with an incredibly bad temper, which I’ve been told is not uncommon for those snakes.
Habitats varied in size and complexity, with the best having climbing structures and pools, as well as varied substrates and basking spots. The worst was at one of the non AZA zoos – in my post about the callitrichids, I mentioned that one zoo kept marmosets in what was essentially a closet. Two Burmese pythons were in an identical closet right next door. Big snakes should be able to stretch out in their enclosures – a rough formula I’ve heard is that the length of the snake should be no more than half of the perimeter (for example, if you have an exhibit that’s 6 x 4, that’s a perimeter of 20 feet, so the max size a snake should be 10 feet). I’ve also heard a tank should be no less than 2/3 the length of the snake, or various other formulas. Basically, it comes down to the fact the big snakes often don’t have habitats as large as they should to allow proper movement and behavior, including thermoregulation (a snake should have a warm end and cool end of the tank, and you can’t achieve that effect if the ends of the tank are practically the same place.
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One final big snake story – my old director wasn’t the only one who wanted a “big ass” snake. At a large AZA zoo reptile house, the curator was constantly on the search for a big snake to be our star, our centerpiece – so when he got an offer for a giant snake (in this case it was a green anaconda, but a python would have been just as acceptable) three hours away, he was immediately hooked. The owner claimed the snake was 28 feet long – a python of that length would have been an amazing animal, almost worthy of the financial reward that the Bronx Zoo has had in place for years for a snake over 30 feet long – and an anaconda? Those are proportionately so much more massive than pythons, it would have been a beast to behold. So, the entire reptile staff loaded up in a van and drove three hours to get the snake… except for me, the new guy, who was left in charge of the entire building all day by myself. I was just finishing the morning routine when I got a text from one of the keepers (the same unfortunate fellow who’d gotten a Galapagos tortoise bite described in an earlier post): “15 foot max. We’re on the way back.”
Seriously, it’s like the guy didn’t think they were going to measure?