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  2. Green anacondas have slow metabolisms, and with the exception of breeding females, only need to eat once every few weeks. They are opportunistic apex predators and eat a wide variety of prey. Juveniles tend to eat fish, birds and small mammals.

    • Green Anaconda Profile
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    • Green Anaconda Fact-File Summary

    The green anacondahas many names, the giant anaconda, the common anaconda, the common water boa or the sucuri. It’s the heaviest and one of the longest snakes in the world – reaching over 6m in length. It’s a boa, which means it’s a constrictor which wraps itself around pray forming a constriction coil and is non venomous.

    1. Green anacondas are the heaviest snakes in the world

    When it comes to size, this may just be one reptile you don’t want to meet face to face! After all, few snakes can claim to be one of the largest in the world. While they may not be the longest snake in the world (although they’re close with record-breaking sizes nearly 6 meters long), the green anaconda is the heaviest snake in the world. With a weight ranging anywhere from 97.5 kilograms all the way up to 160 kilograms, these water boas can weigh the same as a golf cart. 1

    2. Their size is often exaggerated

    There has been lots of claims and reports of anacondas measuring over 9m (30 feet) in length, but very little credible evidence. Almost all specimens in excess of 6m (20 ft), including a much publicised specimen of 11.36 m (37.3 ft) long are often just skin, without body or parts – and are prone to being stretched. Therefore reports of 40 foot long anacondas, like in the famous movie, are very much fiction. Still, in comparison to a man, they can grow to huge sizes – like this green anaconda...

    3. They’re non-venomous, they constrict prey

    Surprisingly, despite being one of the top predators in South America, green anacondas don’t have any venom in their bite. These serpents are a type of boa, which means they rely on restriction to suffocate their prey rather than venom. This, paired with their size, murky coloration, and underwater speed, makes them the perfect ambush predator.

    Scientific Classification

    1. Osterloff, Emily. “What is the biggest snake in the world?” National History Museum. Accessed February 11th, 2022. 2. Michelle Z. Donahue. “Female Anaconda Strangles Male After Sex“, National Geographic, 2017

  3. As they develop, their diet becomes increasingly complex. Prey availability varies more in grasslands than in river basins. In both habitats green anacondas have been found to feed on large prey, usually 14% to 50% of their own mass.

  4. Weighing up to 550 pounds, the green anaconda is the heaviest and one of the largest snakes in the world. ... Jaws attached by stretchy ligaments allow them to swallow their prey whole, no matter ...

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  5. The anaconda's jaw bones splay open at the front because they are loosely connected. This allows it to swallow prey larger than the size of its head. The windpipe in its mouth allows it to breathe while swallowing its prey.

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  6. May 21, 2024 · As carnivores, green anacondas eat any prey they manage to capture and kill, from animals as small as birds and fish to those as large as deer, capybaras, and wild pigs. They have been observed eating caimans and jaguars as well. Regardless of the preys size, green anacondas utilize stretchy ligaments in their jaws to swallow their food whole.

  7. Jan 24, 2024 · The green anaconda is the largest and most well-known species within the genus Eunectes, a group of large, nonvenomous, boa-like snakes found in South America. Also known as a common anaconda, this species from the boa family is known for being one of the heaviest and longest snakes in the world, often overshadowing its relatives, such as the ...

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