1 00:00:01,840 --> 00:00:07,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to Brainstuff, a production of iHeartRadio, Hey brain Stuff 2 00:00:07,520 --> 00:00:15,440 Speaker 1: learn volabah here. Flying animals are common, but not particularly diverse. Birds, bats, insects, 3 00:00:15,480 --> 00:00:19,239 Speaker 1: and pterosaurs, being the extinct relatives of dinosaurs that had 4 00:00:19,280 --> 00:00:23,480 Speaker 1: complex wing membranes, are the only four groups of organisms 5 00:00:23,520 --> 00:00:27,680 Speaker 1: that have ever evolved the ability to fly. But what 6 00:00:27,760 --> 00:00:33,080 Speaker 1: about the so called flying snake. These reptiles can't actually fly. 7 00:00:33,520 --> 00:00:37,319 Speaker 1: They more fall with style allah buzz light year. They 8 00:00:37,320 --> 00:00:41,559 Speaker 1: can glide over long horizontal distances despite their lack of wings. 9 00:00:42,800 --> 00:00:45,320 Speaker 1: There are five known species of snakes within the flying 10 00:00:45,360 --> 00:00:49,320 Speaker 1: snake genus. The smallest is the banded flying snake, which 11 00:00:49,320 --> 00:00:52,160 Speaker 1: measures in it just two feet long or about sixty centimeters. 12 00:00:52,680 --> 00:00:55,319 Speaker 1: The biggest species, called the ornate flying snake, can get 13 00:00:55,360 --> 00:00:57,400 Speaker 1: up to four feet long that's one and a half meters. 14 00:00:58,400 --> 00:01:01,200 Speaker 1: Rounding out this little quintet are the Paradise tree snake, 15 00:01:01,400 --> 00:01:06,479 Speaker 1: the Moluccan flying snake, and the Indian flying snake. These 16 00:01:06,480 --> 00:01:09,360 Speaker 1: creatures are tree dwellers that live in the rainforests of 17 00:01:09,400 --> 00:01:13,479 Speaker 1: South and Southeast Asia. Being gliders and not true flyers, 18 00:01:13,680 --> 00:01:16,960 Speaker 1: they don't produce thrust when they go airborne. This renders 19 00:01:17,000 --> 00:01:21,560 Speaker 1: them incapable of traveling upwards through the air. Gliders are 20 00:01:21,680 --> 00:01:26,600 Speaker 1: actually really common in Asia's southeastern rainforests. These ecosystems include 21 00:01:26,600 --> 00:01:32,480 Speaker 1: gliding squirrels, gliding frogs, and various gliding lizards. Biologists don't 22 00:01:32,480 --> 00:01:35,760 Speaker 1: know what makes the trait so widespread there, but it 23 00:01:35,840 --> 00:01:38,160 Speaker 1: might have something to do with a family of large 24 00:01:38,200 --> 00:01:42,679 Speaker 1: trees that's common in the area, the terracarps. These trees 25 00:01:42,680 --> 00:01:45,880 Speaker 1: can grow some two hundred feet tall that's about sixty meters. 26 00:01:46,480 --> 00:01:49,320 Speaker 1: The lower halves of their trunks are pretty much branchless, 27 00:01:49,440 --> 00:01:54,000 Speaker 1: which is a huge inconvenience for tree climbing animals. It's 28 00:01:54,120 --> 00:01:57,400 Speaker 1: possible that all of these unrelated critters evolved the ability 29 00:01:57,440 --> 00:01:59,600 Speaker 1: to glide as a way of getting from tree top 30 00:01:59,640 --> 00:02:02,880 Speaker 1: to tree top more easily. It sure beats scampering up 31 00:02:02,880 --> 00:02:05,520 Speaker 1: and down limbless trunks all day, especially when you're a 32 00:02:05,560 --> 00:02:11,040 Speaker 1: snake with nothing to enable scampering. Flying snakes have somewhat 33 00:02:11,040 --> 00:02:14,640 Speaker 1: mysterious habits out in the wild. For the article this 34 00:02:14,680 --> 00:02:17,080 Speaker 1: episode is based on how Stuff Works. Spoke via email 35 00:02:17,160 --> 00:02:21,520 Speaker 1: with herpetologist Jake Soka. He said, we actually don't know 36 00:02:21,600 --> 00:02:24,200 Speaker 1: why they glide. There are no studies that address the 37 00:02:24,240 --> 00:02:27,880 Speaker 1: topic I've been interested for years, but anecdotally I have 38 00:02:28,000 --> 00:02:30,799 Speaker 1: seen them use it for escape from me and other people, 39 00:02:31,360 --> 00:02:33,920 Speaker 1: and it's also possible and likely that they use it 40 00:02:33,960 --> 00:02:36,960 Speaker 1: for effect of locomotion to move to another tree or 41 00:02:37,000 --> 00:02:39,440 Speaker 1: to the ground in a short time, or to avoid 42 00:02:39,480 --> 00:02:44,640 Speaker 1: slithering over substrates where they could encounter a predator. A 43 00:02:44,639 --> 00:02:47,560 Speaker 1: professor at Virginia Tech with ay focus on the biomechanics 44 00:02:47,560 --> 00:02:50,639 Speaker 1: of animals, Soca, has been studying these snakes for over 45 00:02:50,680 --> 00:02:53,400 Speaker 1: two decades and has co authored several papers about their 46 00:02:53,480 --> 00:02:57,800 Speaker 1: burial antics. Flying snakes are particularly interesting because they're the 47 00:02:57,840 --> 00:03:03,240 Speaker 1: only animal with no limbs that also glides. When a 48 00:03:03,320 --> 00:03:06,480 Speaker 1: flying snake launches itself off of some tree or other 49 00:03:06,520 --> 00:03:10,919 Speaker 1: elevated surface, its ribs splay outwards, flattening the animal from 50 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:14,520 Speaker 1: neck to nether regions. The process helps the snakes create 51 00:03:14,600 --> 00:03:18,320 Speaker 1: lift and upward acting physical force that airplanes take advantage 52 00:03:18,360 --> 00:03:23,079 Speaker 1: of by making their bodies more aerodynamic. What this does 53 00:03:23,120 --> 00:03:26,639 Speaker 1: to their internal organs is another mystery, but the method 54 00:03:26,639 --> 00:03:30,360 Speaker 1: gets results. Flying snakes have been seen gliding across horizontal 55 00:03:30,400 --> 00:03:33,720 Speaker 1: distances of over three hundred feet that's one hundred meters. 56 00:03:35,920 --> 00:03:39,560 Speaker 1: Flying snakes do undulate in a slithering motion while they glide, 57 00:03:39,840 --> 00:03:43,080 Speaker 1: which begs an interesting question. Do they do this because 58 00:03:43,120 --> 00:03:46,400 Speaker 1: it helps the gliding process somehow, or is it just 59 00:03:46,440 --> 00:03:51,000 Speaker 1: a useless habit, a behavioral relic of slithering over solid surfaces. 60 00:03:52,640 --> 00:03:56,320 Speaker 1: Soka and his fellow researchers observed seven paradise tree snakes 61 00:03:56,320 --> 00:04:00,520 Speaker 1: gliding in a controlled indoor environment, specifically a four story 62 00:04:00,520 --> 00:04:04,920 Speaker 1: black box theater at Virginia Tech. Using high speed cameras 63 00:04:04,920 --> 00:04:08,160 Speaker 1: and motion capture tech, they broke down the choreography of 64 00:04:08,200 --> 00:04:11,320 Speaker 1: the glide that in turn allowed them to build a 65 00:04:11,360 --> 00:04:15,760 Speaker 1: three D digital model of the reptiles. They found that 66 00:04:15,800 --> 00:04:19,480 Speaker 1: a flying snake will undulate both horizontally and vertically while 67 00:04:19,480 --> 00:04:23,000 Speaker 1: it glides. Simulations with the three D model show that 68 00:04:23,000 --> 00:04:26,680 Speaker 1: this complex form of slithering keeps the snakes stable and 69 00:04:26,800 --> 00:04:31,479 Speaker 1: on course during their airborne trecks. Earlier studies had revealed 70 00:04:31,520 --> 00:04:35,280 Speaker 1: that flying snakes can change direction mid glide, and learned 71 00:04:35,279 --> 00:04:37,880 Speaker 1: that they'll often dangle from a tree limb and twist 72 00:04:37,920 --> 00:04:40,800 Speaker 1: the fronts of their bodies into a distinct J shaped 73 00:04:40,839 --> 00:04:45,240 Speaker 1: loop right before taking off. Flying snakes belong to the 74 00:04:45,279 --> 00:04:49,320 Speaker 1: biggest family of modern serpents, the colibrids, along with everything 75 00:04:49,320 --> 00:04:53,480 Speaker 1: from corn snakes to garter snakes to kingsnakes. The flying 76 00:04:53,520 --> 00:04:57,039 Speaker 1: snakes are mildly venomous, but not dangerous to humans. Their 77 00:04:57,080 --> 00:04:59,440 Speaker 1: fixed rear fangs will make a bite swell a bit, 78 00:04:59,520 --> 00:05:03,560 Speaker 1: but the it's the absolute worst. The creatures are die 79 00:05:03,600 --> 00:05:07,480 Speaker 1: neural hunting birds, bats, lizards, and frogs. In broad daylight, 80 00:05:08,360 --> 00:05:11,200 Speaker 1: flying snakes slither up tree trunks to the highest branches, 81 00:05:11,440 --> 00:05:14,200 Speaker 1: using their entire body to grab a hold of bark 82 00:05:14,240 --> 00:05:18,279 Speaker 1: and other rough surfaces on the trunk. None of the 83 00:05:18,279 --> 00:05:22,279 Speaker 1: five known species are deemed endangered, though herpetologists have expressed 84 00:05:22,320 --> 00:05:24,600 Speaker 1: a bit of concern about how the banded flying might 85 00:05:24,600 --> 00:05:28,520 Speaker 1: be faring these days. And this is where I wish 86 00:05:28,600 --> 00:05:31,600 Speaker 1: we weren't an audio only podcast. The next time you 87 00:05:31,600 --> 00:05:34,920 Speaker 1: have a chance, look up video of flying snakes. They 88 00:05:35,040 --> 00:05:43,320 Speaker 1: are weird and beautiful. Today's episode is based on the 89 00:05:43,400 --> 00:05:46,039 Speaker 1: article the flying snake doesn't fly so much as fall 90 00:05:46,120 --> 00:05:49,000 Speaker 1: with style on how Stuffworks dot Com, written by Mark Mancini. 91 00:05:49,360 --> 00:05:51,600 Speaker 1: Brain Stuff is production of ByHeart Radio in partnership with 92 00:05:51,600 --> 00:05:53,920 Speaker 1: how Stuffworks dot Com and is produced by Tyler Klang. 93 00:05:54,440 --> 00:05:57,360 Speaker 1: Four more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app 94 00:05:57,480 --> 00:06:00,000 Speaker 1: Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to your favorite show. 95 00:06:00,040 --> 00:06:10,720 Speaker 1: I was