Two-Headed Copperhead May Go to Educational Facility

A two-headed baby rat snake at Cameron Park Zoo in Waco, Texas. (Rod Aydelotte /Waco Tribune-Herald via AP)

Tuesday, 25 September 2018 09:03 AM EDT ET

A two-headed Eastern Copperhead snake recently found near the nation's capital may be sent to an educational facility, a wildlife and conservation research hospital said.

The Wildlife Center of Virginia said the two-headed snake was found in a northern Virginia neighborhood last week. It said a state herpetologist brought the snake to the hospital Thursday for an examination.

A hospital release said the two heads were found to have two tracheas and two esophagi, but share one heart and set of lungs. The Charlotte Observer reported state biologists believe both heads are capable of biting and distributing venom.

State herpetologist J.D. Kleopfer said in a Facebook post that two-headed snakes are extremely rare because "they just don't live that long." He said he hopes to donate the snake to a zoo.

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A two-headed Eastern Copperhead snake recently found near the nation's capital may be sent to an educational facility, a wildlife and conservation research hospital said.
two-headed, copperhead, snake
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2018-03-25
Tuesday, 25 September 2018 09:03 AM
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