Snakes can hear more than you think

A snake with a yellowish head and brown striped body stretches its neck upwards. It is spotlit in bushland at night.

A woma python in the wild. Image: Dr Christina Zdenek.

A woma python in the wild. Image: Christina Zdenek.

A University of Queensland-led study has found that contrary to popular belief, snakes can hear and react to airborne sound.

Dr Christina Zdenek from UQ’s School of Biological Sciences, in collaboration with Queensland University of Technology’s Professor Damian Candusso, played three different sound frequencies to captive-bred snakes one at a time in a soundproof room and observed their reactions.

“Because snakes don’t have external ears, people typically think they’re deaf and can only feel vibrations through the ground and into their bodies,” Dr Zdenek said.

“But our research – the first of its kind using non-anesthetised, freely moving snakes – found they do react to soundwaves travelling through the air, and possibly human voices.”

A coastal taipan reacts to airborne sound. Video: Supplied

A coastal taipan reacts to airborne sound. Video: Supplied

The study involved 19 snakes, representing five genetic families of reptile.

“We played one sound which produced ground vibrations, while the other two were airborne only,” Dr Zdenek said.

“It meant we were able to test both types of ‘hearing’ – tactile hearing through the snakes’ belly scales and airborne through their internal ear."

The reactions strongly depended on the genus of the snakes.

“Only the woma python tended to move toward sound, while taipans, brown snakes and especially death adders were all more likely to move away from it,” Dr Zdenek said.  

“The types of behavioural reactions also differed, with taipans in particular more likely to exhibit defensive and cautious responses to sound.

“For example, woma pythons are large nocturnal snakes with fewer predators than smaller species and probably don’t need to be as cautious, so they tended to approach sound,” Dr Zdenek said.

“But taipans may have to worry about raptor predators and they also actively pursue their prey, so their senses seem to be much more sensitive.”
A woman holds a large snake with a snake handling hook in front of her. She is standing in a grassed area with trees in the background. She is smiling.

Dr Christina Zdenek handles a brown snake. Image: Chris Hay.

Dr Christina Zdenek handles a brown snake. Image: Chris Hay.

Herpetologist and snake handler Chris Hay and Dr Christina Zdenek.

Herpetologist and snake handler Chris Hay and Dr Christina Zdenek. Image: Damian Candusso.

Herpetologist and snake handler Chris Hay and Dr Christina Zdenek. Image: Damian Candusso.

A reddish orange patterned snake lifting its head on grass.

A coastal taipan in the wild. Image: Chris Hay.

A coastal taipan in the wild. Image: Chris Hay.

Two men and a woman standing with their arms in front of them. They're all smiling.

(L-R) Herpetologist and snake handler Chris Hay, Professor Damien Candusso (QUT) and Dr Christina Zdenek (UQ). Image: Kyle Zenchyson.

(L-R) Herpetologist and snake handler Chris Hay, Professor Damien Candusso (QUT) and Dr Christina Zdenek (UQ). Image: Kyle Zenchyson.

A snake's head pokes out of a cloth bag on a wooden floor.

Image: Chris Hay.

Image: Chris Hay.

Dr Zdenek said the findings challenge the assumption that snakes can’t hear sound, such as humans talking or yelling, and could reshape the view on how they react to sound. 

“We know very little about how most snake species navigate situations and landscapes around the world. But our study shows that sound may be an important part of their sensory repertoire."
Dr Christina Zdenek

“Snakes are very vulnerable, timid creatures that hide most of the time, and we still have so much to learn about them.”

The research has been published in PLOS ONE.

Media:
Dr Christina Zdenek, c.zdenek@uq.edu.au, +61 (0)475 267 909; Faculty of Science Media, science.media@uq.edu.au, +61 (0)438 162 687.