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When a soaring Short-toed Snake-Eagle spots a delicious snake, it swoops down, grabs it with its talons, then tears off the snake’s head. Still on the wing, it swallows the entire snake, head first. Smaller than Bald Eagles, they live mainly in Africa and have legs and toes covered in thick scales to protect them from bites. Snake-Eagles take on some of the swiftest and deadliest snakes in the world, like cobras and black mambas.
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BirdNote®
Snake-Eagles Are Awesome
Written by Bob Sundstrom
This is BirdNote.
Snake-eagles are pretty incredible.
That name — “snake-eagle” — may conjure up some kind of fearsome sci-fi hybrid, spawned in a secret laboratory. But snake-eagles are for real.
[Short-toed Snake-Eagle calls, http://www.xeno-canto.org/366048, 0.15-20]
And they are awesome, big birds of prey. When a soaring snake-eagle spots a delicious snake, it swoops down suddenly, grabbing with its talons. Then it immediately flies upward, as the snake writhes and strikes. The first order of business is to minimize the danger, so the eagle crushes or tears off the snake’s head. Still on the wing, it then swallows the entire snake, head first.
Snake-eagles are a bit smaller than Bald Eagles. There are six different species. And they live mainly in Africa, although one ranges as far as Europe and India.
[male Short-toed Snake-Eagle calls, http://www.xeno-canto.org/240492, 0.2-.06]
Snake-eagle legs and toes are covered in thick scales that help protect them from bites. And bites are a serious risk: snake-eagles take on some of the swiftest and deadliest snakes in the world, like cobras and black mambas.
[Short-toed Snake-Eagle calls, http://www.xeno-canto.org/366048, 0.15-20]
But not every meal is a battle with a deadly adversary. When not snatching snakes, snake-eagles may also hunt lizards, rodents, and even bats or fish.
For BirdNote, I’m Michael Stein.
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Bird sounds provided by XENO CANTO 366048 recorded by Marco Dragonetti and XC240492 recorded by Jarek Matusiak.
BirdNote’s theme music was composed and played by Nancy Rumbel and John Kessler.
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© 2017 Tune In to Nature.org December 2017/2018 / November 2022 Narrator: Michael Stein
ID# snake-eagle-01-2017-12-05 snake-eagle-01