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Can Boa Constrictors Breathe While They Constrict?
Live Science
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9 hours ago
A new study reveals how boa constrictors avoid suffocating themselves while constricting their prey.
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00:00
When boa constrictors squeeze the life out of their prey, how do they avoid suffocating
00:04
themselves in the process?
00:10
A new study published in the Journal of Experimental Biology solves this mystery.
00:15
It turns out that boa constrictors can rapidly adjust which section of their rib cage they
00:19
use to breathe.
00:21
So if one portion of the snake is, say, busy constricting a squirrel, a different portion
00:25
can take over and allow air to continue moving in and out of their lungs.
00:29
Researchers figured this out by placing blood pressure cuffs on boa constrictors to restrict
00:33
the movement of their ribs.
00:35
They then used a special technique called X-ROM to track how the snake's ribs were moving
00:40
in real time.
00:41
The team also used various techniques to measure airflow in and out of the snake's lungs and
00:45
the electrical activity of different muscles.
00:48
Unlike humans, snakes don't have a diaphragm to help pull air into their lungs and then
00:52
push it back out.
00:54
Instead, the animals completely rely on muscles attached to their ribs to alter the volume
00:58
of their rib cage and thus allow their lungs to expand and compress.
01:02
In these video clips, you can see how when one section of the rib cage is constricted
01:05
by the blood pressure cuff, another section takes over to ventilate the lungs.
01:10
Even when only the back of the lung, towards the snake's tail, can inflate, air still travels
01:14
through the rest of the lung, allowing oxygen to pass into the bloodstream and waste products
01:18
to pass back out.
01:20
Study author John Capano told me that the development of this form of lung ventilation
01:24
was likely a key step in the evolution of snakes as we know them today.
01:28
He said, what we postulate in this paper is that this sort of modular lung ventilation
01:33
mechanism is a big part of how snakes evolved to be what they are today.
01:37
It doesn't seem like you could evolve constriction to kill really big things if you're compromising
01:42
lung ventilation.
01:43
So if you ever see a boa constricting a cute, fuzzy animal, don't worry.
01:48
The boa can breathe just fine.
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