Guess What? Snakes Have "Best Friends" Too!

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A team of Canadian researchers found that garter snakes form strong friendships with their peers (Credit: Oregon State University / CC BY-SA-2.0/ Creativecommons.org)

Given their reputation as solitary creatures that come together only to mate and hibernate, the notion of snakes hanging out in groups with their "best friends" may sound a little far-fetched. However, a recent study conducted by researchers from Canada's Wilfrid Laurier University asserts that the reptiles not only actively seek out socialization with their peers, but are also extremely particular about who they spend time with.

For the study, the team led by Ph.D. student Morgan Skinner and associate professor Dr. Noam Miller, selected 40 specimens of non-venomous garter snakes. Ten were from a single litter purchased from a snake breeder, while the remaining were captured from the wild. After marking each specimen with a speck of nontoxic color to allow for easy identification, the researchers placed ten snakes inside each of the four plastic shelters contained within a tabletop enclosure.

Skinner photographed each snake group twice a day before removing them from their shelters. After cleaning the areas thoroughly to rid them of any familiar smells, the reptiles were rearranged into different groups and returned to the enclosure. A camera mounted over the shelters allowed the scientists to capture the animals' movements every five seconds, 12 hours a day, for a total of eight days.

Garter snakes are harmless to humans, making them popular pets (Credit: Steve Jurvetson/ CC BY -SA-2.0 Creativecommons.org)

When Skinner and Miller analyzed the images, they found that regardless of where they were placed, the snakes always slithered back to their original "friends," forming groups of three or eight inside the small shelters. "They have sophisticated social cognition," Miller told National Geographic. "They can tell others apart."

The scientists, who published their findings in the journal Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, are not sure why the snakes seek out friendships. However, they believe the animals would not waste their energy forming bonds unless it were beneficial to them. Miller hypothesizes that the tendency for snake friends to curl up with one another probably helps retain moisture and heat in the wild. Being in groups may also help keep predators at bay.

Gordon Burghardt, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Tennessee, who was not involved in the research, says, "[The study] should help convince people that snakes aren't all cryptic loners, but have more social intelligence and a larger social repertoire than most of us realize."

Garter snakes eat anything they can overpower including frogs (see above), lizards, and rodents (Credit: Cjottawa /CC BY-SA-3.0/creativecommons.org )

Miller believes the research could help with reptile conservation efforts. Endangered snake species relocated to safer habitats often leave these areas, jeopardizing efforts to save them. Now, conservationists may be able to avoid that by transferring entire snake cohorts to the new location. Alternatively, they could also spray the new habitat with the species' scents to make transplants feel at "home."

Garter snakes are not the only reptiles that display human-like social behavior. Previous studies have found that male and female cottonmouth snakes often forage together for long periods of time, while rattlesnakes set up communal dens to look after each other's babies!

Resources: Nationalgeographic.com, livescience.com, sciencemag.org

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342 Comments
  • beefymarshmalow
    • june_wolf
      june_wolfalmost 4 years
      I LOVE SNAKES AND THIS IS SO COOL
      • therealsnakes
        therealsnakesalmost 4 years
        i love snakes
        • teddy20134
          teddy20134almost 4 years
          Snakes are just to creepy to even think about to me but at the same time its cool
          • gfvdbjzbx
            gfvdbjzbxalmost 4 years
            woah to think about it snakes are cool!!!!
            • gfvdbjzbx
              gfvdbjzbxalmost 4 years
              that is so creepy!!!!!!!!!!!!!
              • ami23
                ami23almost 4 years
                This is just scary!😱
                • therealsnakes
                  therealsnakesalmost 4 years
                  I just love this post p.s shout out to @wolfganger you are so cool
                  • therealsnakes
                    therealsnakesalmost 4 years
                    I love snakes number one there are so many types number two I can have one for a pet number 3 they are loveable if you love snakes as much as I do plz follow me I saw a lot at my old house but we moved one time there was a snake a like two gecko 's and when the snake moved the geckos would start I just love snake if you do leave a little like p.s sorry I have been gone for a little bit I was traveling
                    • wolfganger
                      wolfgangeralmost 4 years
                      One time me, my cousin, and my brother found gardener snakes in our back yard and we played with them it was so fun! And guess what there were three of them perfect right!!!!!