Snake Feeding
Quality Captive Bred Burmese Pythons
Myths
abound when it comes to the nature, care and keeping of reptiles and
amphibians. One of the most common is related to the feeding of live
prey. Many people, including experienced herpetologists,
herpetoculturists, pet store owners, store employees, and authors of
reptile books say that reptiles and amphibians (collectively known as
herps) will only eat live prey.
On the
contrary. Most herps found in the pet trade can easily be converted over
to feeding on killed prey, especially those herps who are already
feeding on live rodents and rabbits. Reptiles and amphibians who
normally feed on a variety of prey in the wild such as invertebrates,
small mammals, amphibians and birds will take killed prey in captivity
if offered properly. Herps whose main dietary staples include birds,
fish and swimming amphibians and insects are more difficult to convert
to feeding on killed and some may never do so.
The types
of herps who can be easily converted to killed prey include snakes such
as king, milk, gopher, pine, bull, boas, pythons (except the more
difficult green tree pythons and emerald boas), corn and rat snakes.
Lizards who will eat killed prey include blue-tongue and other
omnivorous skinks, many of the geckos, bearded dragons, water dragons,
sail fin lizards, basilisks, monitors of all types, and teiids (tegus,
agamas). Large rodent-eating amphibians such as bullfrogs and ornate
horned frogs will also take prekilled prey.
Why Feed Killed?
The most common arguments presented for feeding live prey are that
"feeding live is more natural for the animal - after all, no one kills
their food in the wild" and "I like to give my animal a chance to hunt
and kill because it really likes it."
The fact,
however, is that captivity is not a natural state. Our reptiles and
amphibians are not spending their days searching for food, hiding from
predators, searching out favoured microhabitats while avoiding
aggressive members of their own species, hiding, vulnerable to predation
and attack, during their shed periods. Instead they are housed (or
should be!) in a comfy enclosure with all of their habitat needs met. If
we wanted our animals to enjoy a natural state, we would never have
acquired them.
As for
needing the "thrill of the kill," that is anthropomorphism at its worst.
What our reptiles and amphibians need is a large enough environment
outfitted properly to give it enough mental and physical stimulation.
For reptiles who are handleable, handling and that opportunity to be out
of their enclosure provides the exercise and stimulation that they need,
not chasing a rat or mouse around a small rectangular box.
Feeding
killed is also safer for the reptile or amphibian. An animal who is not
hungry will not eat. It will ignore whatever is going on around it. A
prey animal left alone in a tank with a predator, however, is not so
relaxed about the whole thing. Mice and chicks are usually terrified,
spending their time cowering in a corner or trying to find a place to
hide. Rats, however, come from bolder, and hungrier, stock. If left
alone long enough with a disinterested predator, they will begin to eat
whatever is around: your snake or lizard. Crickets and mealworms are
similarly fearless and hungry. Rats have eaten their way into snakes,
devouring the skin and flesh off their backs, exposing long stretches of
backbone, even quite literally eviscerating them. Even crickets and
mealworms will gnaw away at the skin and seek moisture from the eyes of
healthy herps when left unattended in an enclosure without proper food
and moisture for them. One of the most tragic things a vet or
experienced herper sees is an otherwise healthy reptile or amphibian
that has to be put down or is already dead from such prey feeding
practices.
Live prey
may also fight back during a feeding session causing severe injuries.
Claws and teeth can bite through the mouth area, puncture eyes, cut
through tongue sheaths, and puncture or slice through a coil of the
predator's body.
There are
those who will argue that it does not happen in the wild. There are also
those who will argue that it does happen in the wild and that, being a
natural occurrence, should not be avoided in captivity. It does happen
in the wild. We don't see much evidence of it as the injured or crippled
predator manages to hide away before dying or is itself preyed upon by
another predator before dying or is scavenged after dying.
Whether it
happens or not, however, is immaterial. We are responsible for the
health and well-being of our animals in captivity. That means keeping
them properly housed, heated, humidified and fed. And that means keeping
them safe from avoidable harm.
Humanely Killing Prey
There are a number of ways of killing prey most of which involve the
rapid separation of the vertebrae at the neck just below the base of the
skull. Some people can do this quickly by hand; others recommend the use
of a spoon. Still others recommend blunt trauma to effect immediate
unconsciousness and death.
There is,
however, an easier way that is less traumatic to the mammalian prey
animal, ensures immediate unconsciousness followed almost
instantaneously by death. This is done by setting up a tank, be it a
deep aquarium, bucket or rubber or plastic wastebasket set aside for
this use, and filling it half full of carbon dioxide (CO2) gas. Once the
tank is thus 'charged,' the prey animal is placed inside (be careful to
not get your head too close to the tank as the gas is quite capable of
knocking you unconscious, too). It is immediately rendered unconscious
and is killed within a few minutes. The killed prey can then be removed
(it is recommended that you use long kitchen or barbecue tongs), and set
aside to be fed out or frozen for later use. Let the gas dissipate
outside by setting the tank outside for a couple of hours.
You can
get CO2 relatively inexpensively in a gaseous form in tanks from
welder's supply shops, and in solid form (as dry ice) from ice houses;
these suppliers may be found in the telephone yellow pages.
Sources of Killed Prey
Live prey may be purchased as usual, killed humanely, and then fed out.
Have an experienced herper show you how to quickly kill prey by breaking
the neck. If you are unsure how to do it, you may cause injury and pain
rather than death, so please do not experiment.
While some
people have no problem with the feeding of prey and are interested in
feeding killed prey, they may not be able to do it themselves. An
increasing number of pet stores are selling prekilled prey or may kill
upon request. If you have a large number of reptiles or just a few big
eaters, there are many mail order prey suppliers who ship out bulk
orders of frozen prey. Their prices are less expensive than pet store
prices, even when adding in the cost of shipping. It takes much less
room to store 100 frozen adult mice in your freezer than it does to
house, feed and care for properly the same number of live mice. Buying
frozen can save you enough money to enable you to provide better care
and housing for your herp, or even to acquire another one.
If you
breed your own or acquire large quantities of live mice, rats or
rabbits, you can set up a mini-gas chamber to quickly euthanize the
prey. By 'charging' a deep enclosure, such as a tall aquarium or a clean
garbage can, with carbon dioxide (CO2), and then placing the prey
inside, they are killed almost instantaneously, being rendered
unconscious when they hit the gas. (Note: you cannot euthanize reptiles
or amphibians this way as their oxygen metabolism is very different and
they can live surprising long periods of time in an oxygen deficient
atmosphere.) Gassed prey should be frozen for several weeks before
feeding out. This will dissipate any gas in the tissues (which some
people feel may be harmful based on experience with birds of prey
freshly gassed rodents) and will kill any parasites in the rodents.
Defrosting Frozen Prey
First off, you don't feed out the prey while it is frozen! You do need
to thaw it thoroughly and warm it slightly before feeding it out.
Freezing
for 30 days kills off most parasites and other organisms that may be
harmful to your herp. Prey may be kept safely frozen and fed out for up
to six months after the date it was first frozen.
Remove the
number of prey items you need from the bag of prey. You can place them
in a clean plastic bag and soak in warm water, or leave in the
refrigerator overnight to defrost, warming up in warm water. If you are
skilled with your microwave, larger prey may be defrosted and gently
heated using the defrost setting or lower power settings. Small pinkies
can be quickly defrosted and warmed by holding under warm running water,
or in a bag on top of a warm surface, such as the stove-top over the
pilot light.
Always
make sure that not only is the frozen prey thoroughly defrosted but that
it is warmed up to a temperature above room temperature. You do not want
your warm reptile eating cold prey, and warming the prey also makes it
smell more strongly, and thus more attractive, to your reptile, and may
be especially important when feeding reluctant feeders and when in the
process of converting live feeders to killed.
Feeding Killed Prey
When first converting your herp from live to killed, try first offering
a killed prey by dangling it from haemostats or kitchen tongs -- never
hold the prey in your fingers! You may need to move it back and forth a
bit to catch the herps attention. Be prepared for the strike and quickly
release the prey.
Converting Live Feeders to Eating Killed
If the herp is not interested, you might need to first feed a small
stunned live prey, followed immediately by a freshly killed prey, then a
prekilled prey. At the next feeding, start off with a freshly killed
prey, followed immediately by a prekilled prey. When these are easily
taken, go to offering the prekilled prey.
Converting Non-Rodent Eaters to Rodent Prey
Some snakes available in the pet trade are amphibian and lizard eaters.
This makes it not only difficult to obtain prey for them, but makes it
rather difficult to convert them to eating rodent prey.
A suitable
food such as a frog or lizard should be obtained and humanely euthanized
for feeding. Instead of feeding it out, however, the lizard or frog
should be rubbed all over a suitably sized prekilled mouse or rat to
scent it. The scented rodent is then offered for feeding.
Another
method is to pith (stick a pin or small nail) into the brain case of a
killed rodent; this intensifies the scent and may attract a reluctant
feeder into feeding.
For other
suggestions on how convert to feeding killed rodents or to get reluctant
feeders feeding, contact your local herpetological society.
This site is © Copyright Chris Eagleton 2004-2005, All
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