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milestogo

(21,275 posts)
Wed Jul 9, 2025, 08:53 AM Wednesday

Scientists discover Burmese pythons have never-before-seen cells that help them digest entire skeletons

Specialized cells in the intestinal lining of Burmese pythons allows them to completely absorb the skeletons of their prey.



Researchers found that specialized cells in Burmese pythons' (Python bivittatus) intestinal lining process calcium from the bones of their meals. This helps explain how these predators digest whole prey. The team published its findings June 25 in the Journal of Experimental Biology. Burmese pythons typically dine on birds and small mammals, though they don't need to eat every day. The snakes swallow their prey whole and spend several days digesting their meal before hunting again.

As part of digestion, pythons break down their prey's bones. The bones provide necessary calcium in the snakes' diet — but the pythons can't use all the calcium. "We wanted to identify how they were able to process and limit this huge absorption of calcium through the intestinal wall," study co-author Jehan-Hervé Lignot, a biologist at the University of Montpellier in France, said in a statement.

To examine how the snakes managed their calcium intake, the researchers fed Burmese pythons one of three diets: a regular diet of whole prey; a low-calcium diet with boneless prey; and a diet with boneless prey and a calcium supplement. After several meals, the team studied the effects of each regimen on the snakes' intestines. The team found that narrow, specialized cells in the pythons' intestinal lining played a role in digesting bones. In the snakes that ate whole prey or boneless prey with a calcium supplement, these cells held particles made up of calcium, iron and phosphorus. But these particles weren't present in snakes that only ate boneless prey.

The cells may be involved in dispelling calcium that the snakes couldn't absorb. It's possible that the cells could concentrate the extra calcium into the particles, then release the particles alongside other undigested components into the snakes' feces, the researchers wrote in the study.

https://www.livescience.com/animals/snakes/scientists-discover-burmese-pythons-have-never-before-seen-cells-that-help-them-digest-entire-skeletons
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Scientists discover Burmese pythons have never-before-seen cells that help them digest entire skeletons (Original Post) milestogo Wednesday OP
Boy that really relieves me of worrying if Boas get enough calcium. marble falls Wednesday #1
I was more concerned about indigestion. milestogo Wednesday #2
I am more worried about me becoming the source of that indigestion! marble falls Wednesday #3

milestogo

(21,275 posts)
2. I was more concerned about indigestion.
Wed Jul 9, 2025, 09:50 AM
Wednesday

Sometimes when I eat whole prey it just sits there in my stomach for hours.

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