Abstract
A CURIOUS fact has been lately brought to my notice by a friend of mine, Mr. H. M. Oakley, in connection with the Dasypeltis scaber, Linn., or egg-eating snake—the “Eijer eter” of the Dutch colonists—which, if not already well known, may prove of interest to some of your readers. The specimen obtained by Mr. Oakley was caught at Hout Bay some twenty miles from Cape Town, and is about 3 feet in length, and its size, markings, and colour bear sufficient resemblance to those of the Berg Adder (Clothos atropos, Linn.) to be easily mistaken for that snake. It also has keeled scales, generally characteristic, at the Cape, of venomous species. Its head has, however, the long lacertine shape distinctive, here, of harmless snakes, but, when aroused and alarmed or irritated, it flattens it out until it assumes the usual viperine shape of the “club” in a playing card. It then coils as for a spring, erects its head with every appearance of anger, produces a hissing noise with its scales, not unlike the hiss of a puff adder or cobra, and darts forward as if to strike its fangs into its foe, and in every way exactly simulates the motions of an irritated berg adder. This snake has, however, neither fangs nor teeth (which, indeed, would not be required for egg-swallowing), and is not poisonous, a fact which was placed beyond doubt by Mr. Oakley repeatedly placing his finger in the reptile's mouth. This seems a clear instance of mimicry of another species for defensive purposes, but I am not aware of another instance among ophidians.
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TOOKE, W. Mimicry in Snakes. Nature 34, 547 (1886). https://doi.org/10.1038/034547c0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/034547c0
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