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What is known about the FEELINGS of Australian pythons?
I hope to get a large number of responses to this question, as I have searched all over the Internet and could not find any answers there. All herp science and research seems to focus only on measurable facts and features, but does not even consider to describe the PSYCHOLOGY of snakes. My question is not about the reproductive cycle or the mating behavior of snakes. I want to know what is known about their EMOTIONAL love life! Their feelings of love and affection, so to say.
Examples from my own home:
1) I have one pair of eight year old snakes who love each other so dearly that they are currently sitting on their common eggs together - male and female - to keep them warm and to protect them. This couple has been inseparable for years.
2) Snakes can also form loving bonds with humans: I have felt heaps of affection from my snakes. Whenever one of them got out and was found again, they always snuggled around me and were obviously happy to have found me again. When my daughter took a python for a "show and tell" to school and I put the snake right in the middle of a big circle of 30 kids, the snake immediately found the right direction and went straight back "home" into the safety of my daughter's arms. We did this experiment with three snakes and it always worked.
3) The "dark side": I also have a pair of (new) snakes who were kept together from baby age as a breeding pair for four years, but practiced "domestic violence" - with the male being badly harassed by the female, bitten repeatedly and not allowed to eat any food, until he was close to death by starvation, while the female grew about four times his size.
4) Now, after one month recovery and eating in solitude, I have introduced that mistreated male to a yearling girl of mine (though of a different kind) who has about the same size as him, and I watched them today all day how they were gradually falling in love with each other deeply. As everything in snakes (except of hunting) it happened very slowly, but it was nevertheless very touching. I observed how they said their "first hello", then "sniffed" each other, then "kissed" the first time, then connected "heart-to-heart" and then shyly moved apart again, amazed by their own boldness, just as teenagers do...and from my intuitive spontaneous "guts" feeling, I would say that they have indeed fallen deeply in love with each other.
So, my question to you is: What do you know about the FEELINGS of Australian pythons? Has anybody done any studies?
I hope to get a large number of responses to this question, as I have searched all over the Internet and could not find any answers there. All herp science and research seems to focus only on measurable facts and features, but does not even consider to describe the PSYCHOLOGY of snakes. My question is not about the reproductive cycle or the mating behavior of snakes. I want to know what is known about their EMOTIONAL love life! Their feelings of love and affection, so to say.
Examples from my own home:
1) I have one pair of eight year old snakes who love each other so dearly that they are currently sitting on their common eggs together - male and female - to keep them warm and to protect them. This couple has been inseparable for years.
2) Snakes can also form loving bonds with humans: I have felt heaps of affection from my snakes. Whenever one of them got out and was found again, they always snuggled around me and were obviously happy to have found me again. When my daughter took a python for a "show and tell" to school and I put the snake right in the middle of a big circle of 30 kids, the snake immediately found the right direction and went straight back "home" into the safety of my daughter's arms. We did this experiment with three snakes and it always worked.
3) The "dark side": I also have a pair of (new) snakes who were kept together from baby age as a breeding pair for four years, but practiced "domestic violence" - with the male being badly harassed by the female, bitten repeatedly and not allowed to eat any food, until he was close to death by starvation, while the female grew about four times his size.
4) Now, after one month recovery and eating in solitude, I have introduced that mistreated male to a yearling girl of mine (though of a different kind) who has about the same size as him, and I watched them today all day how they were gradually falling in love with each other deeply. As everything in snakes (except of hunting) it happened very slowly, but it was nevertheless very touching. I observed how they said their "first hello", then "sniffed" each other, then "kissed" the first time, then connected "heart-to-heart" and then shyly moved apart again, amazed by their own boldness, just as teenagers do...and from my intuitive spontaneous "guts" feeling, I would say that they have indeed fallen deeply in love with each other.
So, my question to you is: What do you know about the FEELINGS of Australian pythons? Has anybody done any studies?