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A ball python coiled with brown and tan patterned scales, its head resting near its body. Real photograph
Real photograph Seth Cochran, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC0

Ball python

Python regius

say it BAWL PY-thon

Why we love them

The ball python is a small, gentle snake with a chunky body and a neat little head. Its skin is patterned with warm brown blotches on a darker background, and its tummy is a soft creamy white. Grown-up ball pythons are usually about one to one and a half metres long, which is roughly the length of a tall grown-up lying down. The females are a bit bigger than the males.

Ball pythons live in the warm grasslands and open woodlands of western and central Africa. They love to hide, and they spend much of their time on the ground or tucked away underground in cosy burrows that other animals have dug. They rest quietly through the hot day and come out mostly at dusk and during the night to look for food.

This snake has a very famous, friendly trick. When a ball python feels frightened, it does not like to bite. Instead it curls its body into a tight little ball and hides its head safely in the middle. That is exactly how it got its name. Because they are so calm and gentle, ball pythons are one of the best-known pet snakes in the world.

Ball pythons have no venom at all. To catch a meal, a python gives a gentle but firm hug. It wraps its coils around its food and holds on, and this careful squeeze is how it hunts small animals like mice, other little mammals, and birds. A mother ball python lays a small clutch of leathery eggs, curls around them to keep them warm, and the babies hatch out after about two months.

Ball pythons are listed as near threatened, which means people are keeping a close eye on them. Many are taken from the wild to be sold, and this can leave fewer snakes in the grasslands where they belong. Looking after their wild homes, and caring for pet snakes kindly and responsibly, both help ball pythons in the years ahead.

My home

Grassland, savanna, open woodland

Where I live

Africa

What I eat

Small mammals, birds, rodents

How long I am

1–1.83 m

How long I live

15–30 years

When a ball python feels worried, it curls up into a tidy ball with its head safe in the middle, and that is how it got its name.

Ball pythons are gentle, quiet snakes that like to hide in cosy burrows in the ground.

A ball python has no venom; it is a hugging snake that holds its food tightly instead.

Ball pythons come out most at dusk and during the night to look for food.

Every ball python can feel happy, scared and loved — just like you.

Looking after my friends

Worth watching

They are doing okay, but people keep a careful eye on them so they stay safe.

You can help by learning their names, keeping wild places clean, and telling someone why this animal matters.

Official status: near threatened (IUCN)

Where this came from