

The largest snake is a colossal constrictor found in South-East Asia. Reticulated Python (Length: 7.67m / 25.2ft)

Here are the longest snakes on land, in water, and with a nasty bite. We’ll break these up into three categories because each one has a different answer. But what is the biggest snake in the world? Let’s find out! There are numerous claims about how large they can grow, and myth and film frequently depict them as monster-like in length. Thanks to a gene that allows a lot more ribs to be produced during their development as embryos, snakes come out all stretched and long. While elongations in the giraffe world are a product of larger bones, in snakes, it’s a result of many more of them. They’re also strangely elongated no other vertebrate animal has proportions quite like them. That alone makes them pretty outstanding. Snakes are tetrapods (four-legs) with no legs. They’re the perfect blend of weird, frightening, and beautiful, and this must be why seemingly every culture on the planet has one or more legends about them. See also: The Largest Insect Ever Existed Was a Giant "Dragonfly" This Gigantic, Extinct Devil Frog Was Capable of Eating Dinosaursĭocument.Snakes are probably the most infamous animal on earth. Most of the plus-size reptiles in Titanoboa's habitat were algae-colored and difficult to see against the landscape, making it easier to find dinner. The giant snake hunted by sneaking up on its prey. Unlike some contemporary poisonous snakes, Titanoboa wouldn't have benefited from brightly colored markings. It shared its ecosystem with large Crocodylomorpha and large turtles, which may have served as food for the giant snake, except large sized Purusaurus brasiliensis, for example, too big for Titanoboa to handle. Titanoboa inhabited the first recorded Neotropical forest in the world. cerrejonensis found had a total length around 12.8 m (42 ft) and weighed about 1,135 kg (2,500 lb 1.12 long tons 1.25 short tons). The only known species is Titanoboa cerrejonensis, the largest snake ever discovered, which supplanted the previous record holder, Gigantophis.īy comparing the sizes and shapes of its fossilized vertebrae to those of extant snakes, researchers estimated that the largest individuals of T. The giant snake lived during the Middle to Late Paleocene epoch, a 10-million-year period immediately following the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event. Life-sized model of Titanoboa devouring a crocodilian, from the Smithsonian exhibitįossils of Titanoboa have been found in the Cerrejón Formation, and date to around 58 to 60 million years ago.
