Simply: Larger No
Longer Yes A python
2006-07-25 02:22:05
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Facts: The largest anaconda ever measured was almost 28 feet long with a girth of 44 inches. She wasn't weighed at the time she was caught, but scientists estimate that she must have weighed over 500 lbs.
If you look in the records there is a lot of controversy over which snake holds the world's record for massive size. The dimensions that have earned the anaconda the title of king is its total body mass or its weight (the sheer physical bulk of it). The other snake that competes with the anaconda is the Asiatic Reticulated Python (Python reticulatus). The python holds the world's record for length of a snake, with the longest ever measured at 33 feet. Even though the longest python is longer than the record-holding anaconda, the girth of the anaconda is far bigger. Anacondas in the jungles of South America can grow as big around as a grown man!
The Secret Life of an Anaconda
Anacondas in the wild spend most of their time hanging out in rivers hunting for their food. They are solitary creatures that are somewhat shy and not many of them are easily seen. They are very well camouflaged in the swamps and bogs in which they thrive. There are some historical reports of early European explorers of the South American jungles seeing giant anacondas up to 100 feet long and some of the native peoples of the South American jungle have reported seeing anacondas up to 50 feet long. No one has caught and measured an anaconda anywhere near that size. It is important to note that when a dead anaconda's hide or skin is laid out it can be stretched very easily, expanding to much longer lengths than the snake exhibited when alive. Reports of outsize anacondas that cannot be verified are usually due to distortions in perception, or a snake skin being disproportionately stretched and inaccurately measured. People are generally really bad at estimating length, especially for larger snakes. In fact, the larger the snake, the larger the margin of error.
Anacondas like to hang out in rivers so it would be difficult to estimate the length of one seen swimming, without seeing the entire snake. It's the anaconda's ability to remain partly hidden in the water that makes it difficult to accurately find (and document) a specimen that exceeds the current world's record. (Would you want to jump in the water after a giant anaconda to try and measure a snake big enough to kill you?)
Killer Snake
Anacondas are members of the boa constrictor family of snakes. That means that they kill their prey by coiling their large, powerful bodies around their victims and squeezing until their prey suffocates or is crushed to death and dies from internal bleeding. Then the snake unhinges its jaw and swallows the victim whole. Anacondas are much more likely to eat aquatic creatures, such as fish. Occasionally they have been known to eat: caimans (a relative of the alligator), other snakes, deer, and even jaguars. Anacondas are rather slow-moving snakes, so they have to rely on stealth and the element of surprise to catch their unsuspecting prey.
2006-07-24 21:49:56
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answer #2
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answered by leathersammie 4
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The Reticulated Python is touted as being the longest snake in the world. However, it's thinner than the Anaconda, so, pound for pound, the Anaconda can be the heaviest snake in the world.
2006-07-24 21:45:54
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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there is not known yet but i think there is no snake larger than anaconda lives nowadays.
2006-07-24 21:45:28
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answer #4
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answered by apexi a 1
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anaconda is the largest snake on earth
2006-07-24 21:45:46
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answer #5
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answered by Violet UK 4
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some sea snakes can grow larger
2006-07-24 21:44:01
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answer #6
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answered by glock509 6
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What about a 49 ft python??
2006-07-24 21:48:14
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answer #7
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answered by Paul 4
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no.
the anaconda is the world's larget snake.
2006-07-24 21:43:21
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answer #8
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answered by grubblywrigglysquigglywitchety 3
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different types of adder snakes r there
2006-07-24 22:26:54
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answer #9
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answered by Bluffmaster 3
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Yes. There are!
2006-07-24 21:43:25
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answer #10
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answered by The Knowledge Server 1
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