Unfortunately, in the end, the python's power was no match for the cobra's venom. “It would kill the python pretty quickly,” Sheehy says.
"There is no evidence that pythons are resistant to cobra venom, and the time that a snake takes to kill its prey will depend to a large extent on the amount of venom injected," notes herpetologist and author Johan Marais.
The hedgehog (Erinaceidae), the mongoose (Herpestidae), the honey badger (Mellivora capensis) and the opossum are known to be immune to a dose of snake venom.
The researchers noted that the Burmese python (Python bivittatus), for example, is extremely resistant to the venom of cobras.
Yes. King cobras, which are not in the cobra genus, are ophiophagus, meaning they eat other snakes. In fact, their binomial is Ophiophagus hannah, and they will eat any snake smaller than them. If the python is larger, it might be able to exhaust and kill the king cobra.
Unfortunately, in the end, the python's power was no match for the cobra's venom. “It would kill the python pretty quickly,” Sheehy says. “Probably within 30 minutes, they could both be dead.”
A black mamba would win a fight against an inland taipan because it's larger and far more aggressive than the other snake. Still, when we talk about the “winner” of a fight between two of the deadliest animals alive, we can't truly say one will survive and the other won't.
An anaconda would win in a fight against a python. These two creatures are so similar in every facet except for length, thickness, and weight, and those are the ones we have to use to determine who would win if they faced off.
King cobras are impressively venomous, large snakes native to Asia. They are called king cobras because they can kill and eat cobras.
Their resistance is to the a-neurotoxin in snake venom, specifically. Domestic pigs have a genetic mutation in their cell receptors that prevents binding of the a-neurotoxin, rendering the venom useless. The resistance doesn't occur in most pigs until they are adults, so small pigs are still vulnerable.
The mongoose is known for its ability to fight and kill venomous snakes, especially cobras. Their specialised acetylcholine receptors render them immune to venom, while their thick coats and quick speed also come in handy during conflicts.
The researchers found adaptations in Komodo dragon genes involved in coagulation that make these lizards immune from the venom anti-coagulant, protecting them from bleeding to death when attacked by another of their own species.
Cone Snail
Only a handful of people have ever been stung, but, quite unfortunately, there is no antivenom.
Yet, the reticulated python - the world's longest and heaviest snake - remained constricted around the king cobra and killed the cobra while too being dead.
An anaconda would win a fight against a king cobra. This outcome assumes that both of these creatures met in an open area that doesn't allow an ambush to happen.
A king cobra would win a fight against a taipan. The taipan has much deadlier venom, but that's not going to save it against the great amount of experience that king cobras have in attacking snakes. Neither snake lives in the same area of the world and they're from different families.
MYTH! Although it is sometimes possible for similar species to interbreed, such events are extremely rare. The young resulting from such an event are usually unable to breed. There is no documented account of a venomous snake species interbreeding with a non- venomous species.
The saw-scaled viper, Echis carinatus, is considered the deadliest snake in the world, according to Britannica. This type of snake is said to be responsible for "more human deaths than all other snake species combined." The venom of the saw-scaled viper is not as lethal as other snakes, but it is far more aggressive.
Intriguingly, opossums shrug off snake bite venom with no ill effects. Claire F. Komives, Ph. D., who is at San Jose State University, explains that initial studies showing the opossum's immunity to snake venom were done in the 1940s.
In 2014, an olive python was video-recorded killing and eating a freshwater crocodile at Lake Moondarra, which is near Mount Isa. In that case, it took five hours for the snake to slowly stretch its jaws around the constricted croc. Pythons are able to perform amazing feats of swallowing thanks to their elastic jaws.
Pythons have predators. Small, young pythons may be attacked and eaten by a variety of birds, wild dogs and hyenas, large frogs, large insects and spiders, and even other snakes. But adult pythons are also at risk from birds of prey and even lions and leopards.
Except no one told the kingsnake. Kingsnakes squeeze their prey to death, are immune to rattlesnake venom and are so named for their astonishing ability to overpower and eat snakes that are much larger than they are.
The Eastern brown snake (Pseudonaja textilis) has a venom LD 50 value of 0.053 mg SC (Brown, 1973) and a value of 0.0365 mg SC (Ernst and Zug et al. 1996). According to both studies, it is the second most venomous snake in the world.
The black mamba, for example, injects up to 12 times the lethal dose for humans in each bite and may bite as many as 12 times in a single attack. This mamba has the fastest-acting venom of any snake, but humans are much larger than its usual prey so it still takes 20 minutes for you to die.
The killer of the most people
The saw-scaled viper (Echis carinatus) may be the deadliest of all snakes, since scientists believe it to be responsible for more human deaths than all other snake species combined.