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VIDEO: This Girl Slept Near a Big Python Every Night!

Our pets are just like any other part of the family and we want them by our sides all the time — day and night. For many people, that means letting their pets sleep in bed with them.

Anyone can write on Evonews. Start writing!

The things is, there are some pretty dangerous pets out there that should not be allowed on the bed under any circumstance.

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Take this girl’s case! She used to sleep with her python every night, until she talked to a veterinarian and almost had a heart attack when she heard what he had to say.

Here is some further information on pythons and on how dangerous they really are, provided by Wikipedia.

Most members of this family are ambush predators, in that they typically remain motionless in a camouflaged position, and then strike suddenly at passing prey. They will generally not attack humans unless startled or provoked, although females protecting their eggs can be aggressive. Reports of attacks on human beings were once more common in South and Southeast Asia, but are now quite rare.

Pythons use their sharp, backward-curving teeth, four rows in the upper jaw, two in the lower, to grasp prey which is then killed by constriction; after an animal has been grasped to restrain it, the python quickly wraps a number of coils around it.

Death occurs primarily by asphyxiation; some research has suggested that pressures produced during constriction may cause cardiac arrest by interfering with blood flow, but this hypothesis has not been confirmed.

Larger specimens usually eat animals about the size of a house cat, but larger food items are known; some large Asian species have been known to take down adult deer, and the African rock python, Python sebae, has been known to eat antelope.

In 2017, there was a recorded case of a human devoured by a python in Sulawesi, Indonesia. All prey is swallowed whole, and may take several days or even weeks to fully digest.

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Contrary to popular belief, even the larger species, such as the reticulated python, do not crush their prey to death; in fact, prey is not even noticeably deformed before it is swallowed.

The speed with which the coils are applied is impressive and the force they exert may be significant, but death is caused by suffocation, with the victim not being able to move its ribs to breathe while it is being constricted.

All snakes, including pythons, are descended from a venomous ancestor. Although the mandibular and maxillary glands of pythonids are primarily mucus-secreting, they also produce small quantities of toxins that are also known from venomous lizards and caenophidian snakes, including three-finger toxins (3FTx), lectin toxins, and veficolin toxins.

The presence of not only these, but also other toxins in the snake Cylindrophis ruffus, as well as iguanas and monitor lizards, indicates that the production of small amounts of toxins by pythonids is a relic of once better-developed venom system that pythonids and boids have down-regulated, presumably because they developed powerful constriction as an alternative means of killing their prey, leaving them with little need for a venom.

Joanna Grey

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