MY CORAL SNAKE Tries To Eat A Fer-de-lance VIPER!!!
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- Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024
- This is the first coral snake feeding video I have been able to film. This guy is so picky even when it comes to snakes. If you enjoyed this feeding video let me know. Venomman20 merch at the link below
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I wasn't sure what to title this video so hopefully this doesn't qualify as clickbait I'm sure we will try to get him to eat a viper again in videos to come.
It's all good. He's beautiful!
No I don't think the title is click bait at all. True click bait is when someone actually deceives the audience in a bid for extra attention or money or both. In this case, though there was no grand fight between serpents or some such that a few people might have been hoping for the video did show exactly what was stated in the title. I wasn't at all let down nor felt deceived. It was a good video!
Thank you
Thanks for the insight I appreciate it
How long have you had it? I know they’re not supposed to be able to survive in captivity
I love how you get down to a whisper as your doing the talk over. It shows how much you really like what you do.
Thanks vemonman20 great video really informative. I have been waiting 4 a good coral snake video
Thank you
I always get educated when I watch your vids, thank you.
Absolutely drop-dead gorgeous snake. That yellow just pops.
It's great that he finally decided to have a snack all on his own! Hope to see him eat again soon!
Thank you I will try to get it on film again
One of the very best hot snake video I have ever seen. Super well narrated, excellent info!
Thank you I appreciate it
That is freaking awesome!!!! I do believe this is the first video I’ve seen of a captive coral snake eating!
Your voice is strangely soothing.
Very beautiful snake thank you for sharing
Nice job on the info for this coral snake buddy!!!!
Eastern coral snakes are probably the most mellow elapids I've ever seen.
By far.
Hi Brandon. I was so excited to see that I somehow had missed this video. So I just watched it. I love your videos and content.
Another amazing video bud hello from Tennessee USA again
If america was gonna only have one type of elapid at least it was a cool, beautiful one. thats also pretty interesting and makes a lot of sense on the morphs since theyre rarely scene. Makes since why we have so many ball python morphs being more of a burrow dweller.
I'm so glad he finally ate something ..
Awesome. I was hoping she'd eat the Fer-de-lance. But anyway it's a good sign she did eat on her own for the very first time. I was wondering how you assist-feed her? With a cannula (hope that's the correct word) and a syringe? That's what I did with some picky eaters when they've been very small. I used a blender and 'created' a mixture out of pinkies, vitamins, eggs and other stuff that made a healthy nutrition until they were finally eating on their own. Or do you force feed by using tweezers?
He is so beautiful ❤❤❤
Well done! I heard they are picky eaters glad you got it to eat
Thank you it was work lol
Very informative video. You really know your reptiles!!
Thank you I appreciate it
Very great presentation,earned the bell click...Cheers!!!!
@venomman20 Pretty interesting video and quite informative. It was pleasantly a good watch and I’ve fed my Bearded Dragon a Alligator Lizard before. I had him in quarantine for a month until I threw him in my dragon’s cage. Without hesitation my dragon ate him in seconds. Thank you for the awesome content 👍🏽 definitely a beautiful coral snake.
Your coral snake is so cute
Whaaaat. I think this will get some views with that title! I remember one video on RUclips shows a venom lab that has to force feed liquid to all their corals and they’ve been alive for a decade!
Clickbait? Nah... you did specify “tries”. Love the videos! I always watch them as soon as I can instead of waiting for a weekend like some other channels I follow. Thank you sir. And as always... stay safe!
Geez, I'll have to go back and re-watch this video because I must have missed the "TRIES!"
Good thinking with the skink I'm glad he finally ate on his own. Just wondering,do you still have the Dwarf Caimans?
I’m in South Texas. Rattlesnakes and Coralsnakes are definitely here. I’ve seen them pop up at my house 1-3 times a year. I’m afraid to go under my house to do plumbing work because of those damn things. I had one close call already. So fuck that. :(
Really awesome bro
Thanks so much
Title made me mildly worried this was going to be another animal fighting vid but I was pleasantly surprised by how well your reptile handling is
Albino coral snakes, like lions and tigers and bears are not enough ! Gawd.
Great video Brandon I enjoyed watching this video I have caught those lizards before. And what states are Coral snakes in?
Thank you Ryan coral snakes are found in North Carolina to Louisiana, including all of Florida. The Texas coral is found Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas and sometimes Oklahoma not to mention the Arizona coral which is found in Az. And new Mexico they can be found as far north as Kentucky so really any part of the southern United states
@@venomman20 wow I didn't know there in Louisiana thank you.
I’ve had EC snakes around my house for the past 35 years and in Houston they’re a lot of Gardner snakes, skinks and lizards. I’d start there.
Love learning about snake's
That’s awesome, you got him to eat something! Never knew that about the AZ Coral snake. Let me know when you make it this way, it’d be a pleasure to be your tour guide!
what happens to the tiny rocks they eat by mistake
its good news you got it feeding apparentlybthey are really hard to keep in captivity. and clickbait nah there was about 5 seconds we saw of it lol
And I live in Arizona the difference is instead of red and yellow it’s red and white. Not like the Az king they’re patter is smaller it looks like 100 of red black and white
Have you ever come across a snake that once you have it hooked and looking at it get scared and think wtf am I doing??
Hope you have a thankful Thursday!
I didn’t think anyone had ever successfully kept a coral snake in captivity. How long have you had him?
280 days and counting
The rhyme doesn't work almost ever on the Sonoran Coral Snakes. Ours don't have the yellows, we have a cream or beige color instead.
Where is the fer-de-lance mentioned in the title?
Hey venomman, so I've asked this several other times on other channels and never got an answer..
When snakes eat and the substrate sticks to the meal, what happens then? Do they just end up passing the substrate whole?
Yeah they either swallow it and they will pass it with their next movement or in some extreme circumstances it can cause impaction and be potentially life threatening but that’s usually a result of other issues in husband, or it gets stuck on their mouth and they wipe it out against other objects and are fine
It typically passes cypress is one bedding that doesn't
I use a coconut husk bedding on most of my animals. It digests better if its ingested. The biggest thing to worry about is substrate getting stuck in their mouths and causing infection or mouth rot. Not a big thing to get it out of a pythons mouth like i have but hots like venomman20 keeps id say thats abit more of a challenge
I've recently switched from K-Y Jelly to EVOO for backdoor entry 😎
Hey if you ever need some stillborn babies , I come across some here and there breeding some animals , lmk if you want them shipped with dry ice if I get anymore , I mean they’ll be F/T but still gooood foood man , k HMU, I mean one pair of bullfrogs will feed him forever in a tub next spring turn some tadpoles to frogs lol , my buddy used to keep one and literally raised bullfrogs and leopard frogs for his , those dang frogs would make so much noise lol drive me crazy at night hanging out
Dont coral snakes eat night crawlers ?
I see your passion and I get people are interested in many snakes including venomous. We rented a house ( in Texas). I was preggers when we moved in and within the first or second month a coral snake was in our house. We killed it and it scared the sh*t out of me. We have 2 special needs kids as well and didnt want any kids bitten. We lived at this house for ten years. We prob killed at least 12 coral snakes at least. I had ppl tell us (exterminators) that they were maybe king or milk snakes so started taking pics. Even my stepdad would take them to show a friend who was shocked at how big they were and how often they were on our front porch or back patio. We didnt constantly let the kids wonder and play where one would happen across these snakes. Would u know why? Do they nest in massive numbers or something? Have you ever heard of this kind of behavior?
Had a relative who got bitten by one (before I was born). My Dad would tell me the story very once in a while before he passed away. If I remember correctly, the relative survived.
That's pretty crazy sorry to hear about your dad
@@venomman20 Well, thank you for your condolences. That was extremely nice of you. . .
As far as his Uncle and the Coral Snake Bite, I did remember something about it. He did survive it. . .I know this because he committed suicide yrs later.
Keep in mind I hadn't heard that story in 20 or 30 yrs (from my Dad) so it wasn't really a fresh memory, lol.
Clickbaity for sure but i'll bite coz that Coral is absolute gorgeous
Is this the only coral snake feeding on cam in captivity footage???
I have no idea maybe
@@venomman20 just thought I heard that before, cool snake brother
They eat centipeds you should try it
Their venom is not particularly complex… it’s mostly monomeric beta neurotoxic PLA2’s and maybe a few 3 fingered toxins in their alpha neurotoxic role (cobras, especially spitting and other highly cytotoxic/cardiotixic as well as neurotoxic, have far more complex venoms even if they are 100% 3 fingered toxins… they’re probably the most amazingly adaptable scaffold found in snake venoms able to agonize or antagonize receptors from the typical alpha subunit acetylcholine receptor neurotoxic inhibitory site).
The seizures induced by the PLA2 in eastern coral snakes aren’t quite as special as your describing… they’re just one of very few beta neurotoxic PLA2’s we’ve injected intracerebrally and could be a function intracranial pressure and is not something the protein can induce without direct injection into the brain or CNS due to the inability to cross the BBB. Likely many other PLA2’s would induce similar effects and while the first there is no indication that their beta neurotoxin will be the best at diagnostic or research applications for Alzheimer’s. It is a fascinating area of research and I love being a part of it, and just because it MIGHT not be as special doesn’t mean it ISN’T the best for that use, it’s just that we have pursued very few other candidates. It’s also not that rare for proteins to form complex structures with odd shapes when placed outside their typical bioactive location. In terms of sequence the PLA2 you’re referrring two is pretty consistent with all coral snakes and similar to those of kraits and cobras and the monomers of the dimeric viper beta neurotoxins like mojave toxin, though not nearly as similar.
My PhD is in venom bioprospecting and I’ve been following the research you’re describing closely and much of the collection and neurotoxicity specificity testing of coral snake neurotoxins was done in our lab with my assistance by a visiting collaborator. I’d love to discuss it more and hear more about why you think it’s venom is so unique and special instead of simply mentioning that snake venoms contain many applications that we are only just beginning to understand and pursue… for instance”…” and many other snakes contain variations of this toxin that we have not yet had the time to availability to look into the relative efficacy of… one of them may not simply be efficacious in diagnosing but may be selectively toxic to another clade than humans and have few side effects while still binding to the plaques of tau protein that we believe progress to Alzheimer’s.
I love your interest and passion and your video dispels myths well and I’m not trying to be picky, your video is more accurate than most I see, but you seem very interested in this and it’s a niche field… and it’s my area of expertise… it’s not likely another doctoral snake venom bioprospector is going to see it. I hope you are doing well.
I really enjoyed reading this comment. I am very excited for the research being done by you and your team on this in particular. The fact my great grandma passed away from not retaining enough mental capacity to eat now my grandma is showing sings of the same issue. Its only a matter of time. This is something I hold dear to my heart. Unfortunately I don't have the degree or probably even the mental capacity to do the work you and your team do. At the same time I try to do my part by talking venoms to the common people while trying to get them excited to conserve such animals. Hopefully I didn't miss-speak much in this video I honestly don't know many people I would trust to correct me if I did but clearly you would be one who could. Thank you for taking the time to check out my video and suffering though my grammatical errors while reading this and of course also for the work you do. You are a true hero
Cool..
Thank you
I recently purchased a mangrove snake and when I try to feed it acts a lot like the coral snake that you have but never eats. I have tried frogs fish and day-old pinky mice but it does not want any of it. How do you assist feed it, it is about 12 inches long and he’s never eaten a meal in captivity
Message me threw tiktok instagram facebook and we will start the process it's to much to text out here
Alright, thank you I will do that soon
Sounds good
So you bought a non eating snake? The breeders should not have sold it unless it was eating well
@@6181green no coral snake in the world eats well. That's the struggle of keeping them but don't worry if anyone can keep it I can
I am so astounded by you guys that keep dangerous snakes. I'd never have anything to do with them...ever. I don't even much care for the small garter snakes that live in my garden. If I spot one slinking through the leaves and plants, I just back off and go somewhere else. I figure that's just one less way I could die. No snakebite is gonna get me!
There's no shame in leaving all snakes alone.
Always wanted one but afraid to get one because of their diet.
You called his jaw his "jawl"!
clickbait
a long dead fer de lance and a striped skink?
Huh i never saw this in arthurs journal
where's the Fer De Lance?
The rhyme isn’t always true...there are mutations that prove this wrong
That's exactly what I said
It didn't bother me, but I do prefer an accurate title.
I try most the time
@@venomman20 Yes, you do. Keep the great vids coming. Thank you.
@@venomman20 I'd like to suggest a video or series of videos about the medically significant venom of different species. Those already in use in current medicines (including what the use is for) and also those being researched for potential use. I realize this would most likely require time-consuming research on your part, but hey, that's what we depend on YOU for! ;-) Thanks for considering...
He eats the skink
A farting snake? Heck yea I’d like to see that! 🤣 Hopefully you do get to catch that on camera. (Sometimes we never grow up)🤷♂️
Dumb statement..one animal being fed what you find around your home? Too small of an amount..yes if you did many animals daily for multiple snakes...maybe
The coral snake eats a skink not a Fer de Lance. Change your lead statement on the video to coral snake eats sknk
Nah I'm good
@@venomman20 I was clicking either way.
Alz-timers? Lol
Coral snakes are in water like water snakes and king cobras and all the people that see this i will always wirte and this to everyone
There's very few species of coral snake in the world that live in the water
reported for clickbait
He did try to eat a fer de lance no clickbait there