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China Times, Xinhua 2015-08-12
A zoo in the southwestern Chinese city of Nanning recently adopted a two-headed cobra. The rare creature has already survived 15 days but the zoo said it may need to call in specialists to sustain its life.
The two-headed cobra. (Internet photo) |
A zoo in the southwestern Chinese city of Nanning recently adopted a two-headed cobra. The rare creature has already survived 15 days but the zoo said it may need to call in specialists to sustain its life.
The
20-centimeter-long snake has two brains but only one digestive system. It was
born on a snake farm and was soon handed over to the zoo for better care. It
weighs only 50 grams, about 15 grams lighter than a normal cobra at the same
stage of life.
Zookeeper
Li Keqi has been caring for snakes since 2007 but said he had never seen a
two-headed snake until now. He said temperature and humidity changes during
incubation may have caused the mutation.
"One
of its heads wants to move to the right, while the other wants to move left.
This kind of incongruity is constantly affecting the animal," Li said.
The snake
shed its skin for the first time a week ago but has since refused to eat.
Zookeepers are using artificial feeding to keep the animal alive, but this
method is not sustainable.
The zoo is
calling for snake experts from around the world to offer their advice.
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