Where did you get this information from? Asfaik, behavioural observations and GIT content control in king cobras have so far revealed local snake species and the odd Bengal monitor as king cobra prey, but none of the ones you mention above.but also lizards, birds, rodents and other small vertebrates, as well as eggs, if snakes are scarce.
Hello Batto. The sources were: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/reptiles/k/king-cobra/; What do king cobras eat and King cobra - Wikipedia.Where did you get this information from?
The National Geographic article gets a 404 error. The "What do King Cobras eat" page is just cut-and-pasting Wikipedia. And Wikipedia is Wikipedia - the bit about rodents etc is curiously un-footnoted.Hello Batto. The sources were: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/reptiles/k/king-cobra/; What do king cobras eat and King cobra - Wikipedia.
Chli beat me to it. Whether king cobras eat rodents in the wild is a matter of great debate among king cobra researchers, breeders and keepers. Frankly, it doesn't appear to be the case. Therefore, and given the aforementioned lack of a reliable footnote, I'd take this info with a very large grain of salt.
Doesn't make much difference to the overall point, the the National Geographic link works if you take the semicolon (presumably added by Dassie rat to break up the list)The National Geographic article gets a 404 error. The "What do King Cobras eat" page is just cut-and-pasting Wikipedia. And Wikipedia is Wikipedia - the bit about rodents etc is curiously un-footnoted.
King cobras in captivity in Asian countries are often fed local snake species, such as rat snakes (Pytas sp.).
In Western countries, such as North America or Europe, captive king cobras are usually fed snakes commonly available in the commercial pet trade, i.e. corn snakes and ball pythons. Some have also managed to make their king cobras accept rats as food. And yes, a few keepers/breeders add supplements such as Korvimin to their diet.
There are plenty of internet platforms such as Venomland or Venomousreptiles.org as well as various FB groups which can get you in touch with international king cobra afficionados.
Maybe this new book on king cobras might be of interest for your project, too.
King Cobra: Natural History and Captive Management
Speaking of which: am I going to find special mention there for my courtesy?![]()
You're welcome.Thank you very much for this information!
Sorry, I am not used to forums. To correct my own mistake, it is a leaflet I am doing, not a project.You're welcome.So that is a yes in regard to the reference?
BTW: you can actually combine the quotation and your comment in one post (as I'm doing right now) to prevent the unnecessary elongation of the thread.
And that was one of the points discussed at said conference, and it's not an uncommon thing when it comes to venomous snakes: anecdotal evidence that is quoted by everyone, but once someone digs deeper, the search for true facts and data leads nowhere. So far, none of the authorative experts , like the two gents mentioned above, has so far witnessed a wild king cobra eating rodents or has found rodent parts in king cobra guts (except in the guts of the serpents the king cobra ate).although the wordage seems to be the same in each site.