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And more about claw strike, its pretty useful against dogs for fight and brutally wound them with sharp claw.
#Boa vs python mr skin skin#
Listen mr bogas lol i mean brogan, i didnt say skin of python has any resistant against bite, i hope you are aware of badger losey, tough, flexible and hard skin, which can easily resist dogs bite. I know i am not good at but atleast i will try to speak type and learn.How about you? do you do hindi? punjabi? sindhi? tamil? bangali? germans? any? rather then english? feel pitty you! i am more better then you at least i know your mother tongue and you know nothing. e will be forgivenįirst of all english is not may mother tongue, so dont try to teach me. You're clearly having comprehension issues, but it's OK.
#Boa vs python mr skin how to#
Either learn how to put a sentence together correctly, or explain at length how the skin of a snake is more resistant to a pit bull's bite than it is to a honey badger's bite, and while you're at it, cite some examples of honey badgers clawing 12 foot pythons to death. One thing's for sure, you do need some help with English composition. Are they slowed down due to them being cold blooded and, at the time, it was cooler or at night, giving the predator an advantage? Is that something unique to pythons also? The snakes also seem very lethargic in those videos. That makes sense.I guess I got typecast into looking at all of those predation videos on pythons in Africa getting killed by Honey Badgers and Leopards where the snake doesn't seem to do anything to protect its head.
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It is not as simple, as you're trying to present it to be. If that is the scenario here, coiling will most certainly present if the dog bites the snake. Yes, there does need to be a point of contact, why you brought ambush up, is still beyond me. Snakes do not just offer up their heads especially in boiids, who will hide their hides when a predation threat presents itself. If the dog does bite the snake by the head, the subsequent shaking will break the snakes' neck before any coiling and constriction is going to happen. That anchor point comes from either a bite to the dogs body, or the dog biting and holding the snake somewhere other than the head. Maybe, but the snake still needs an anchor point in order to get a coil or two around the dog.
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they're also a LOT bigger than boas and that mostly makes up the difference since, according to the "rules" of this board, we're assuming that the python is already committed to killing its opponent anyway instead of trying to scare it away. Difference here being that, while ARPs are generally less willing to commit to killing their opponent to defend themselves. I'd only do that if I could specifically request an extremely large, healthy adult female boa against an entirely average badger. I'd actually give a 12ft boa constrictor better odds against a honey badger than a 12ft african rock python.Īll right go and request boa vs honey badger. Boa constrictors just seem less likely to bite and release, and more likely to bite and constrict. during a predation event, they generally do well. When rock pythons are actually committed to a constriction, i.e. That makes them atrocious pets, but it also makes them bad at defending themselves against an animal willing to just soak the damage like a honey badger. ARP's generally resort to biting repeatedly and then releasing. Boa constrictors are generally much more willing to commit all the way to a constriction in order to defend itself. “If it’s scared it’s going to be worried, but we can’t imagine it’ll cause harm.”Ĭolin Stevenson, head of education at Crocodiles of the World zoo in Brize Norton, West Oxfordshire, said the boa would be feasting on rodents and small birds and the climate meant it was unlikely to survive until Christmas.Also worth throwing out there that african rock pythons and boas aren't the same either. “It’s not the first time we’ve heard or seen this happen, but we’re keeping our eye out to see if anyone’s lost it. She said: “I can imagine somebody’s probably let it go, as a large snake is pretty hard to lose. They live for about 25-30 years and grow continually throughout their lives. Their bodies can be tan, green, red, or yellow, featuring patterns of jagged lines, ovals, diamonds and circles. Their jaws can stretch wide to swallow large prey whole. Their jaws are lined with small, hooked teeth for grabbing and holding prey while they wrap their muscular bodies around their victim, squeezing until it suffocates.īoas will eat almost anything they can catch, including birds, monkeys, and wild pigs. Boas can grow up to 13 feet long and weigh more than 100 pounds.