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Rare albino snake with two heads was hatched at a wildlife centre in Florida

Rare albino milk snake was hatched at a wildlife centre in Florida, much to the staff's surprise

Rare albino snake with two heads  was hatched at a wildlife centre in Florida

Biologist Daniel Parker says that the snake may have a hard time surviving in the wild

Here’s a snake with a split personality.
The odds of a two-headed, or bicephalic, snake being born are 10,000 to one, but nevertheless, this albino Honduran milk snake was recently hatched in the U.S.

Staff at conservation group Sunshine Serpents in Florida were incubating seven milk snake eggs, but got a huge shock when nine heads emerged, because as well as the two-headed snake, one egg contained twins.
Owner Daniel Parker, a University of Central Florida biologist, said: ‘I did a double take. I couldn’t believe what I was looking at.’

Biologist Parker says two-headed snakes have been documented to live as long as 20 years in captivity. 
With two brains giving commands to a single body, he says the snake, which isn’t venomous, would have a difficult time surviving in the wild.

Milk snakes are said by some to suck milk from cows’ udders, but this is a myth. They do however favour living in barns, as they like cool dark environments, which may be the source of the misconception.

Their diet consists of insects, lizards, birds and small mammals.
Another two-headed creature that hit the headlines this year was an African Spurred Tortoise born in Slovakia.

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