Click on the images to load them in higher resolution
Around nine one evening, I heard a loud squeak come from just outside my room. I knew immediately that it was the sound of a rat in trouble. Torch in hand I dashed out and was immediately treated to the sight of a Whitaker Boa strangling the life out of a small rodent. Knowing that neither the boa nor the rat was going anywhere soon I dashed back into my room! In less than twenty seconds I was back out with my camera crouching by the side of the snake. Whitaker boas have notoriously poor eyesight so the torch light wasn’t going to be an issue at all. I stepped around the snake cautiously to make sure I didn’t’ produce too many vibrations that could disturb it. But I might as well have been stomping around since the snake was too involved in squeezing its struggling prey! It seemed as though as long as I didn’t directly breathe on the snake it would remain unconcerned by me being so close to it!
In a few minutes the rat was effectively suffocated and very dead. A minute after the rodent had stopped moving the boa relinquished its hold on the little animal and then began flicking its tongue. I knew of course that it was trying to locate its prey’s head. Apparently the head of a rat smells different from the rest of its body and a snake’s tongue is sensitive enough to tell the difference. Convinced that it had finally located the head, the reptile slowly opened its jaws and clamped them around the rodent’s muzzle. Then, as I clicked away with my camera, it began ‘walking’ its upper jaw along the body of the rat. As one side of snake’s upper jaw maintained a firm hold on the mouse the other side would lift up, move ahead and sink back in. Then the same process would repeat with the other side of the upper jaw. By the time the snake’s mouth was upon the shoulders of the rodent, its lower jaw had fully disengaged from the upper jaw. It moved independently of the upper jaw but nevertheless kept pace with it.
In less than ten minutes the snake had completely engulfed the rodent. With the rodent now securely inside its belly the snake began flicking its tongue again. Perhaps to find a burrow to crawl into, or maybe to find another rodent! Much as I was ok with having the boa around I couldn’t take a chance having it hanging around the front of my room. It wouldn’t be long before my dog or a cat found it and started harassing it. So I gently picked it up with my snake hook and placed it in a thickly forested patch on the other side of our compound wall. Being a boa, I knew, it would be at least another two months before it would need food again!