Python Tries and Fails To Eat Possum With Pouch Full of Babies: 'Too Big'
Python Tries and Fails To Eat Possum With Pouch Full of Babies: 'Too Big'
Acarpet python was found attempting to eat a possum that had three babies in its pouch.
The snake and possum's embrace was discovered in Australia's Gold Coast, and pictures of the python and its unfortunate prey were shared to Facebook by Harrison's Gold Coast and Brisbane Snake Catcher.
"When we arrived the possums were already dead. The snake is fine. But the possum was too big for the snake to eat even [after] we waited the next 4 hours for it to try," they wrote in the caption of the post.
Possums, also known as common brushtail possums, are marsupials native to Australia. They mostly eat plants and other foliage but will generally eat anything they can obtain, especially in urban areas. They tend to grow to body lengths of up to 23 inches long, with their long tails measuring a further foot, and weigh up to 10 lbs.
As with other marsupial species, possums raise their very underdeveloped young in specialized pouches on their abdomens. They are born and transferred to the pouch after only 16–18 days of gestation. At this point, a young is only around an inch long, and crawls from the female's reproductive tract to the pouch on its own, attaching to a teat. The young will then spend four to five months inside the pouch, and then a further few months under its mother's care in the den or riding on her back.
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