The snake takes off its skin. How often do snakes shed their skin? When and how often

I know the world. Snakes, crocodiles, turtles Semenov Dmitry

How does a snake change its skin?

How does a snake change its skin?

People who change their appearance are sometimes compared to a snake that changes its skin. In reality, snakes, like other reptiles, do not change their skin, but periodically molt - they shed the upper, dead and worn out stratum corneum of the skin. Other terrestrial vertebrates also shed - amphibians, birds, and mammals. But in amphibians, only the thinnest layer of skin is discarded, and from the side of the molt it is almost not noticeable, while in birds and mammals, each feather or each hair falls out separately. Only in reptiles does molting have a comprehensive and, one might say, spectacular character.

When lizards and snakes molt, the exfoliation of the upper horny layers occurs simultaneously throughout the body. This process continues for several days. At first, the skin of the animal becomes cloudy, it becomes inactive and loses its appetite. Then the dead and dried surface layer is torn and falls off the body of the animal. Particularly effectively freed from the shedding layers of snake skin. First, the snake rubs its snout against the ground and surrounding objects with its head. After the dead layer bursts on the lips, she tries to catch them on a branch or stone, and when this succeeds, she slowly begins to crawl out of it. The snake crawls forward, and the discarded layer of skin, turning inside out, stretches behind. Under normal conditions, it comes off completely. Such covers thrown off during molting of snakes are called creeps and they are not difficult to find in places where snakes are found. The crawl out accurately reproduces the entire structure of the scaly cover, and from it you can not only determine the species of the snake, but even, like fingerprints, find out which particular individual has molted here. In lizards, due to the more complex body structure, the discarded stratum corneum cannot come off completely and breaks off in pieces. In nature, sometimes you can see an individual running clumsily and seemingly dressed in some kind of rags. This is a lizard in the midst of a molting process. Dangling patches of exfoliated skin hamper her movements, and she tries in every possible way to speed up the release process: she rips off the “gloves” of dead epidermis from her paws with her jaws, scrapes tatters from her head and back with her paws, rubs against the ground, tearing them off her stomach and sides.

In shell-protected crocodiles and turtles, molting is less noticeable - only the upper layers of the horny scutes are peeled off. In turtles, parts of the body free from the shell - the head, neck, paws - molt. Here molting occurs in the same way as in lizards. Do not think that the empty tortoise shells that are sometimes found in nature are shed during molting. Unfortunately, no, these are the skeletons of dead animals.

Moulting of lizards and snakes is an important phenomenon in their life. Growth, metabolism are associated with it (during molting, unnecessary substances accumulated in it are also removed from the body). With shedding layers of skin, reptiles also remove ticks that have stuck to them (and exotic sea snakes get rid of annoying hosts - mollusks adhering to their bodies) in the same way. In many species, molting precedes the mating season. Rapidly growing juvenile reptiles molt more often, adult animals - 1-2 times a year, in certain seasons. More frequent and inappropriate molting indicates a violation of the health of the animal.

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A teenage girl who changes her skin every six weeks due to a rare disease has been kicked out of school because her classmates are afraid of her. Shalini Yadav, 16, suffers from erythroderma, an inflammatory skin condition also known as red man syndrome. This disease is incurable.

(Total 8 photos)

The girl should wet her body with water every hour and lubricate the skin with a moisturizer every three hours so that it does not exfoliate. However, her family of eight cannot afford the cream, and Shalini sheds her skin every 45 days. This is how she has been since birth. Classmates are afraid of her and call her a snake girl. Now Shalini has been kicked out of school.

The girl's mother said that they had been to several doctors, but no one could cure her daughter, and the disease was progressing. “I feel helpless when I see her skin peel off and my child is in terrible pain. This disease does not kill her, but gradually takes her life. We have no idea where to go and who to consult,” she says.

The Shalini siblings have normal skin. Her mother believes that death is better than such a life. The girl herself says: “I wanted to study, but I was kicked out of school because the children were frightened at the sight of my face. The whole family is suffering because of my illness. But what am I to blame? What sin have I committed to be punished with such a disease? I want to live. Help me if you can."

Today, many exotic animal lovers keep snakes as pets. Such a pet requires from the owner some knowledge about the image and life cycle of the ward, for example, about the molting process. What reasons encourage reptiles to shed their skin and how this happens - we'll talk in this article.

Why does a snake change its skin

Shedding, or peeling, in a snake is a natural biological process. There are several reasons why it is needed:

  • wear of the old skin;
  • renewal and cleansing of skin cells;
  • shedding of skin due to growth (debatable factor).

Did you know? The process of skin renewal made the snake one of the symbols of medicine, along with the rod of Asclepius.

How to prepare for a drop

Reptiles, feeling the approach of the molting process, try to get enough first of all. This is necessary because it takes a long time and a lot of energy to shed the skin. The reptile cannot hunt during the preparation and the molting itself: it sees and smells poorly, feels weak, and has no appetite.

Such a state makes the animal extremely vulnerable to natural enemies, so it tries to find a secluded place for the duration of peeling.

Depending on the species, reptiles can be dangerous, aggressive, and will attack anything they see as a threat. Most of all, this applies to poisonous species.

Stages of physiological preparation for skin shedding:

  1. Within 2-4 days, the shields on the belly turn pale.
  2. In about 5–7 days, the mucous membrane of the eye becomes cloudy, turning into a milky bluish color. During this period, vision is greatly reduced.
  3. The eyes gradually clear up.
  4. The pallor of the abdominal shields disappears.

The entire preparation process takes about 12 days. Then comes the shedding itself.

Did you know?According to the undamaged old skin of the reptile found, according to the pattern of scales, one can easily determine what kind of snake it belonged to.

How does she do it

The whole procedure for shedding the old skin takes from half an hour to several hours. As the cells of the new skin begin to divide, the old layer begins to stretch and crack in the muzzle area. The reptile helps him to overstrain, rubbing against the existing rough surfaces - stones, driftwood.
When the dead layer is sufficiently opened from the side of the head, the reptile begins to wriggle, rub against the roughness, gradually crawling out of the "old clothes". It is noteworthy that the old layer is turned inside out, like a stocking. Usually the "creep out" is kept intact, but very large individuals may have breaks.

Important!If moltinggoing on pieces, and not a whole skin, which means that the animal has health problems and urgently needs to be shown to the doctor.

In the video below, you can see how the process of replacing old skin with a new layer takes place.

Video: how a snake sheds its skin

When and how often

As mentioned above, this process is a normal biological phenomenon. The frequency of molting depends on such factors:

The first peeling, depending on the method of reproduction of the reptile, occurs at the age of 7-14 days of age.
Subsequent updates of the skin occur approximately 1 time per month. As you grow older, the interval between procedures increases: 1 time in 3 months, 1 time in six months. Old individuals molt 1 time in 1.5–2 years.

Most reptiles change their old skin for new skin from time to time. This renewal process is called molting and is different for all reptiles. Snakes are no exception, shedding not only all their skin, but even the film covering their eyes.

Why does a snake change skin?

For a long time it was believed that another reason for the change of the skin is that the body of the snake is growing, but its skin is not, so you have to discard it and acquire a new, larger one. At present, this fact causes doubts among scientists.

How does a snake change its skin?

So how does a snake shed its old skin and get a new one? The snake's new skin grows under the old one, and when the process of its growth is complete, the old skin begins to stretch and separate from the new one. First, the old skin bursts around the mouth, and the snake begins to rub its head against various hard surfaces and wriggle, trying to pull it off. When the snake manages to free its head, it just crawls out of its old skin, turning it inside out. The shed old skin looks like almost a whole cover, which, by the way, after being shed, turns out to be several cm longer than the body of the hostess.

How does a snake prepare to molt?

How does a snake change its skin? She is preparing for this process for a very long time - she becomes restless, stops eating, her behavior changes. Some snakes become lethargic and lazy, while others, on the contrary, become nervous and very aggressive. Poisonous snakes are especially dangerous during the molting period.

The fact that the snake is preparing for molting is also noticeable externally: its old skin fades and grows dull, the pattern on it is no longer so clear, and its eyes acquire a dull blue tint. This time is called the "blue eye period" and it lasts an average of 7 days.

How often does a snake change its skin?

It is through the process of constant skin renewal that the snake has become a symbol of medicine and healing.

What is a molt

Moult (general definition)- the process of changing the covers of animals, which has a diverse character.
Among invertebrates, a typical molt occurs in nematodes, cephalopods, arthropods, and groups close to them. In most of these animals, molting is regulated by the hormone ecdysone 1. Since, according to molecular phylogenetics, these groups are related to each other, they have recently been combined under the name Ecdysosoa- Shedding. In these groups, molting is reduced to periodic shedding and change of the cuticle. Before molting, the inner layers of the old cuticle dissolve, and below it, hypodermal cells secrete a new cuticle. After a molt, the animal rapidly expands in size (usually by absorbing water or "puffing up" with air) until the new cuticle hardens, after which growth stops until the next molt (periodic growth).
Nematodes molt larvae (usually there are four larval stages), adult nematodes do not grow and do not molt. In most groups of arthropods (crustaceans, spiders, etc.), molting and growth continue throughout life.
Moulting in insects, as a rule, is repeated at the larval stage; in insects with complete transformation during the last molt, the larva turns into a pupa, and after shedding the covers of the pupa, the insect turns into an adult form - an imago. In insects with incomplete transformation during the last molt, the larva turns into an imago (only mayflies have a winged subimago stage, which molts one more time before turning into an adult insect. Adult insects do not grow and do not molt.
Among vertebrates, molting occurs in all tetrapods. They molt, shedding several layers of keratinized epithelial cells, frogs and toads. Molting is also characteristic of representatives of reptiles. Among reptiles, snakes periodically completely shed their horny cover, with the formation of the so-called. "Crawl out" - the discarded "skin" of a snake. In birds, during molting, plumage is replaced, and in temperate and subpolar latitudes, seasonal molting occurs (in spring and autumn) - a change from winter to summer plumage. Sometimes at the same time its color changes (polar owl, white partridge). In mammals living in temperate latitudes, as a rule, molting also occurs twice a year - in spring, when thick winter wool is shed, and in autumn, when a warm winter cover builds up. Often the color of this cover also changes, for example, in hares, squirrels, etc.

1 Ecdysones(from Greek. ekdysis- molting) - hormones belonging to the group of steroids (27-28 carbon atoms), stimulating molting and metamorphosis of arthropods.

Molting at snakes

Normally, molting is a complex process in which cells of the epidermis intermediate zone (several outer layers of living cells under the stratum corneum) proliferate and form a new stratum corneum, called internal epidermal generation. Roughly speaking, this is a biological process during which a new cover is formed in a reptile and the old one is shed.
Reptiles, in particular snakes, are preparing to “change their skin” for quite a long time, they are worried, they lose their appetite. The time preceding the molt is called the "blue eye" period by herpetologists. At the same time, snake skin looks lifeless, fades, fades, the pattern on it loses its clarity, and the eyes become dull blue. The behavior of animals during this period also changes: some become lethargic and move little, others are nervous and show increased aggressiveness. Poisonous snakes are especially dangerous: accidentally disturbed, they can actively attack and try to bite.

Cheney's carpet python (lat. Morelia Spilota cheynei), cloudy-eyed juvenile


White-lipped python (lat. Leiopython albertisii), cloudy-eyed juvenile

In most snakes, molting begins from the head, with the exception of burrowing snakes of the blind snake family (lat. Typhlopidae), which molt from the tail. At the same time, the exfoliated covers begin to slide, stretching and breaking away in the form of more or less long tubes. The discarded old "stocking" of the blind people does not turn inside out. Normally, the snake sheds quickly and completely. The discarded skin is called the "creep out" and is an almost complete cover, which is several cm longer than the snake's body. Very large snakes molt with a gap "creep out" under the weight of their weight. Lump molting occurs in sick snakes or living in adverse conditions (for example, with insufficient air humidity). It is especially important to have transparent "glasses" on the crawl - the stratum corneum from the eyes, since its untimely convergence can cost the animal vision: squeezing the eyeball leads to its inflammation and even death.

Snake "crawls"

The first molt in kites occurs either immediately after birth, which is typical for viviparous and ovoviviparous species, or 7–14 days after leaving the egg (for oviparous snakes). Further, the young growth molts every 3-4 weeks, as it actively feeds and grows. With age, the frequency of molts decreases, and the intervals between them increase. Adult snakes shed their old skin once every 3-6 months, and some species living in difficult natural conditions (for example, in the highlands) shed only once a year. A snake that has just shed its skin has a beautiful, bright and distinct coloration.

Normal molting goes through several stages:

proliferation stage. At this point, the skin becomes dull and dull. In snakes, this stage is hardly noticeable.
The phase of molting divergence. Includes the formation of internal epidermal generation and the formation of a cavity with lymph effusion into it. Proliferation is replaced by differentiation of cells that make up a new stratum corneum on the periphery of the proliferate with the formation of a thin gap in the intermediate zone (between three layers of old and three layers of new cells). After the formation of internal epidermal generation of cells, a cavity is formed - a zone of stratification. During this time, clouding of the eyes of snakes can be observed. The so-called blue-eye period.
The stratification phase. During it, the skin brightens and almost does not differ from normal. In the phase of stratification, lysis (dissolution) of the interstitial substance and adhesion (adhesion) of proteins occur, followed by molting.

Moulting disorders in snakes

Usually snakes shed their old skin in a very simple way: they crawl out of it. The outer layer of the snake's skin is a single unit, from the goggles on the eyes to the tip of the tail. Blurred eyes are considered the first sign of molting in snakes. But in fact, in the beginning there is a clouding of the abdominal scutes, which takes two to four days. Then the eyes become cloudy for one to five days. The eyes become milky white later, and this color disappears earlier than in other parts of the body, which is of vital importance for the snake, since it does not see well at this time. The third stage is the clearing of the eyes, the fourth stage is the clearing of the abdominal shields and, finally, the last, fifth stage is the actual molting. Preparation for it takes from five to twelve days, the third and fourth stages are often quite short.
Before molting, many snakes lose their appetite and become irritable. Many species living in nature go in search of water in which they get stuck.
In healthy snakes, the molt itself takes from thirty minutes to several hours. It begins after the snake peels off the old cuticle on the lips, rubbing the tip of the muzzle on some rough surface. Then the snake begins to move the skin back from the head and, crawling among the bushes and stones, gradually, centimeter by centimeter, pulls off the old skin. Together with the old clothes, she throws off the "glasses" that protect her eyes.

Patterned snake (lat. Elaphe Dione) in the process of shedding the old skin

According to the materials of the sites: http://ru.wikipedia.org/, http://www.zmeuga.ru/ and the works of Vasiliev D.B.