All of these pieces fit together to form a highly mobile mechanism that allows the nonvenomous pythons to open their mouths wide and engulf their prey. Once an animal is in the snake’s grasp, the sinuous predator coils its long body around the victim to constrict its blood flow before gulping it down — whether the victim is dead or still breathing.
Using a series of 3D-printed plastic probes in varying sizes, scientists tested different individual pythons with probes in increasing sizes, measuring the maximum amount that each animal could open its mouth. The largest probe was 9 inches (22 centimeters) in diameter and looked strikingly similar to an orange Home Depot bucket. Only one snake was able to stretch its gape wide enough to accommodate the giant probe: a python weighing roughly 130 pounds (59 kg) and measuring 14 feet (4.3 m) long.
A Burmese python weighing 31.5 pounds regurgitating a white tailed deer weighing 35 pounds in southwestern Florida
“The probe is big enough to fit over my head,” Jayne said. “To give you an idea of how big that specimen was, it’s too large to fit inside a 5-gallon [20 liters] bucket. That was a hefty one.”
Burmese pythons are plentiful in the Florida Everglades but are an invasive species that decimate local animal populations. For the study, biologists worked with area hunters to access euthanized specimens that had been killed to help reduce the invasive population. This limited the size of the snakes that Jayne and his team could test in their experiments.
“I wish I could’ve gotten bigger pythons, because one thing people always want to know is what is the biggest gape,” Jayne said. “I believe some could have a gape diameter as big as 30 inches [76 cm].
A comparison of a brown tree snake to a Burmese python that shows the upper size limits of what each specimen can swallow.
The study also found that just because snakes have adaptable jaws, not all snake species can open their mouths as wide as a Burmese python can. When the biologists tested the gapes of Brown Tree Snakes (Boiga irregularis) — another invasive species that dines on birds, lizards and small rodents — they found that brown tree snakes, which are about the same length as Burmese pythons but are much less massive, couldn’t gape their gobs nearly as much as their bigger Burmese cousins could.
“The magnitude between the two species was surprising,” Jayne said. “If you compare gape to mass, the two species would be similar. But the pythons, even after correcting for the fact, are much heavier snakes and still had bigger gapes.”
However, Jayne cautioned that just because pythons can open their mouths wide, it doesn’t mean all of their meals consist of large mammals. In fact, much of their diet includes smaller game, such as rabbits, foxes and raccoons.
“Snakes’ anatomy puts an upper limit of what they can eat, since they don’t take bites out of their prey, and instead swallow them whole,” he said. “Just because they have that anatomical capacity doesn’t mean that they regularly use it. Very often prey can be difficult to capture and swallow. I’m very interested in following up and seeing what their anatomy permits.”