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Flying snakes wiggle their bodies to glide down smoothly from trees

While most snakes undulate their bodies to propel themselves on land or water, the paradise tree snake, a species of flying snake, wiggles its body to stabilise itself as it glides through the air
Flying snake
The paradise tree snake (Chrysopelea paradisi)
Jake Socha

Snakes wiggle their bodies to propel themselves on land or through water, but why certain flying snake species do so in the air was unclear. Researchers have now found that this undulation helps the snakes stabilise their bodies, enabling them to glide further.

Isaac Yeaton at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and his colleagues studied the movements of Chrysopelea paradisi, the paradise tree snake, a species that launches itself from the tops of trees and in a single glide.

These flatten their bodies by splaying their ribs and wiggle from side to side as they glide, travelling at speeds of about 10 metres per second.

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The team studied the movement of seven paradise tree snakes using high-speed , filming them from above as they launched off an 8.3-metre-high platform to an artificial tree on the ground.

Analysing the snakes鈥 movements, the researchers found that in mid-air the snakes undulate their bodies in both horizontal and vertical waves, and also bend their bodies to angle their heads upwards and downwards.

The researchers then built a digital 3D model to simulate the snakes鈥 gliding and to look at what effect undulation had on their flight.

Without undulation, the model showed that the snakes would quickly pitch downwards or pitch and roll, becoming unstable while midair. With it, the majority of simulations showed stable glides.

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In other environments, snakes and other animals undulate for locomotion. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e pushing against their environment on the ground or they鈥檙e pushing against water while swimming, says Yeaton. 鈥淚f you stop undulating in that case, you stop moving.鈥

Flying snakes use undulation differently, says Yeaton. 鈥淭hey are using it for stability, not for propulsion.鈥

Nature Physics

Topics: snakes