Snake with Taste for Escargot Evolves Bizarre Strategy

A Japanese Iwasaki snake scarfing down a snail meal.
(Image credit: M. Hoso, T. Asami, M. Hori, The Royal Society)

If the French had teeth like the Iwasaki snail-eating snake, they wouldn’t need tongs and tiny forks to eat escargot.

The Japanese snake, Pareas iwasakii, preys mostly on snails and slugs, but its jaws are too weak  to crush snail shells. Instead, it uses pin-sharp teeth to grab a snail’s body and tug it from its shell. Most snails have shells that swirl to the right in a clockwise direction. So the snake has evolved an upper jaw with more teeth on the right side than the left.

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