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TRUYỆN CƯỜI
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Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Paris (AFP) - The Burmese python
has a built-in compass that allows it to slither home in a near-straight
line even if released dozens of kilometres away, researchers said
Wednesday.
Capable of
growing over five metres (16 feet) long, pythons are among the world's
largest snakes. Although native to South and Southeast Asia, the snakes
have taken up residence in South Florida's Everglades National Park,
possibly after being released as unwanted pets.
They have adapted so well to their new habitat that they now pose a serious threat to several species which they hunt as prey.
They
implanted radio trackers in the animals and followed their movements
with GPS readings from a small fixed-wing plane -- measuring their
direction and speed.
All the
snakes immediately oriented themselves towards the place where they were
captured, with five of the six returning to within five kilometres
(three miles) of that spot.
The sixth veered somewhat off course as it was nearing its destination.
The
snakes travelled between 94 and 296 days, displaying "high motivation
to reach home locations", according to the study, published in the Royal
Society journal Biology Letters.
"This study provides evidence that Burmese pythons have navigational map and compass senses," the authors wrote.
No other snake species has yet been shown to possess a similar homing ability.
Such
navigational skills suggest the python has a razor-sharp sense of
territoriality. This could help combat the species in places where it is
unwanted by predicting where the snake is likely to spread.
Burmese pythons eat everything from tiny birds to deer and even alligators. They swallow their food whole.
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