8 Fastest Snakes in the World

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It’s human nature to assume that our sophisticated bodies with highly developed brains and dexterous digits are the peak of evolution, but there’s a reason that snakes have continued to populate our imaginations and our fears throughout history and across practically every civilization. Snakes evolved millions of years before mammals, and they posed a particularly dangerous threat to these warm-blooded animals because they were ideal ambush predators: both innocuous and quick. Their form factor allowed them to blend easily into practically any environment and move swiftly without notice. And that simplicity of design — when combined with their uniquely hinged jaws — produced a predator that could prey on animals that were seemingly well outside its weight class.

Today, green anacondas can eat anything from wild deer to domesticated sheep. But with the introduction of venom, snakes were killing even the largest animals with their bite. An increasing body of research indicates that primates developed a more sophisticated sense of sight because of threats from snakes, and we appear to share an innate genetic aversion to snakes with our fellow primates.

In turn, snakes evolved their adaptations, and natural selection tended to prioritize adaptations that maximize that inherent advantage of speed. As pure carnivores who are also ambush predators, any minute alteration to strike speed could make the difference between slithering to home with a full belly or potentially being stomped or clawed to death. Ground speed was often less important, particularly with species that had the advantage of good camouflage. But it’s only natural that many snakes saw their environments sharpen their already agile bodies with new advantages. Considering there are more than 3,000 snake species with populations on every continent except Antarctica, these adaptations are quite diverse. Few of us need to fear death from snakes in the way our ancestors did, but that doesn’t make these cold-blooded creatures any less impressive.

Here are eight of the fastest snakes in the world.

#8: Black Mamba — Africa’s Fastest Moving Snakes

Ground Speed: 12 Miles Per Hour

Black mambas are both terrestrial and arboreal.

iStock.com/Nicole_Marschall

If a speed of 12 miles per hour doesn’t sound too fast compared to the record-setting sidewinder rattlesnake, imagine a 14-foot long snake barreling towards you at that speed. Being large and highly poisonous leaves these snakes with few natural predators despite inhabiting environments ranging from grasslands to forests. The black mamba will typically move in sprints between the ground and low canopies if possible using a dipping motion that’s unique to most snakes and particularly stunning given the sheer size of this giant serpent. As long as they can sneak up on it, prey like squirrels and mice rarely stand a chance. That’s because the black mamba combines that exceptional ground speed with a venom poisonous enough to kill a human with just two drops.

#7: Common Death Adder — Australia’s Fastest Striking Snakes

Strike Speed: 100 milliseconds

The common death adder has the longest fangs of any venomous Australian snake.

iStock.com/Ken Griffiths

When we mentioned that few people today have to think every day about snake bites, we weren’t talking about Australia. The death adder earned its name because it combines adept camouflage, highly toxic venom, and an incredibly fast bite. In just a tenth of a second, the common death adder can inject their poison and return their jaw to the active attack position. While over half of venomous attacks on humans will lead to death if left untreated, roughly half of bites are dry bites and there is an antivenom. Death adder habitats stretch across much of eastern and southern Australia, where their ambush tactics make them a serious threat to prey like rodents. Ironically, it could also contribute to the low incidence of common death adder attacks on humans. Death adders have no interest in humans, and their capable skills as hunters mean people will rarely ever sneak upon them.

#6: Southern Black Racer — The World’s Fastest Non-Venomous Snakes

Ground Speed: 8-10 Miles Per Hour

The southern black racer is a subspecies of the Coluber constrictor.

iStock.com/Sunshower Shots

Constrictors are typically some of the slowest snake species on Earth, but the Southern black racer is too small and its ambitions too big to allow it to lay in wait and slowly squeeze its prey to death. Instead, it will use its speed and momentum to pin prey to the ground or trees and suffocate them to death rather than wrapping their bodies entirely around. That land speed is a necessity for evading predators as well. Racers have developed great talents for climbing and swimming as well as sprinting, but hawks have developed a keen sense of eyesight and both the momentum and accuracy to pluck a black racer right up. That’s not to say that the black racer can’t put up a fight. Researchers have observed instances where great horned owls were strangled by racers, which in turn died from injuries inflicted by the owl’s talons.

#5: Yellow-Bellied Sea Snake — The Fastest Snakes in the Water

Speed on Water: 2.5 Miles Per Hour

The yellow-bellied sea snake is found in all tropical oceanic waters except for the Atlantic Ocean.

Ken Griffiths/Shutterstock.com

All snakes are capable of swimming, but the yellow-bellied sea snake is one of several species that have adapted to live their whole lives in the water. Its yellow and black pattern ensures it will stand out distinctly on the waves, but that seems to be of little consequence to this snake which has no observable predators. They also have the widest distribution of any other snake species, with habitats expanding across both the Pacific and the Indian Ocean. Still, it’s rare for humans to encounter one thanks to the deeper waters in which they prefer to swim. That’s a good thing, as sea snake poison is highly venomous. The yellow-bellied sea snake uses to chase prey consisting almost entirely of fish, and they’ve adjusted to the briny waters they inhabit thanks to an ingenious evolution that allows it to filter freshwater from the saline ocean surface.

#4: King Cobra — The Snakes With the Fastest Killing Poison

Time to Kill a Human: 30 Minutes

The king cobra is the longest venomous snake.

iStock.com/takeo1775

The longest venomous snake in the world is such a lethal killer that they’ve taken to making other cobras their prey. Their venom is a unique blend of different toxins — but they can inject roughly a quarter of an ounce into their victims with their needle-sharp teeth. Few animals have immunity from this toxin, meaning that the king cobra has few natural enemies. One exception is the mongoose, a feisty little mammal that’s known for facing down the king cobra. Mongoose is typically three feet long, while king cobras can reach a staggering length of 18 feet. Mongoose isn’t immune to the toxin that cobras produce, but they do have a resistance that allows them to stay in the fight even if they’re a bit. Both animals are lightning quick, and a fight on land could go either way.

#3: Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake — The Fastest Strike Speed in America

Strike Speed: 2.95 Meters Per Second

The Eastern diamondback rattlesnake was a symbol on one of the first flags of the United States.

iStock.com/NajaShots

For ambush predators, being able to reach high movement speeds on land isn’t always a necessity, but a fraction of a millisecond can mean the difference between life and death. The Eastern diamondback rattlesnake’s fangs can cover over six feet in less than a second, and it can strike out at a length up to two-thirds of its entire body length. A fight isn’t what this snake is looking for. Once its prey has been injected with poison, the diamondback will let it wander off to die and follow at its leisure. Mammalian prey can range in size from mice to rabbits. The rattle serves as a way to warn off potential predators before striking.

#2: Rat Snake — The Fastest Strike Speed of a Nonvenomous Snake

Strike Speed: 2.67 Meters Per Second

Black rat snakes are one of the longest snakes in North America.

iStock.com/slowmotiongli

Strike speed can make a big difference for venomous snakes that simply need to inject their prey with a single bite — but the science journalism community is more interested in why a snake that produces no venom and constricts its prey to death would need a strike speed of nearly that of a diamondback. It may have contradicted common conceptions about how venomous and nonvenomous snakes developed in tandem, but it makes sense when you consider that the constriction process can kill prey in just a matter of seconds. It’s a reminder that predators and prey are in a constant evolutionary arms race — and it’s a race that’s often measured in fractions of a second.

#1: Sidewinder — The World’s Fastest Moving Snakes

Ground Speed: 18 Miles Per Hour

The sidewinder is also known as the horned rattlesnake.

iStock.com/Josh Mitchell

The unique way the sidewinder rattlesnake moves is critical to achieving its incredible top speed, but scientists had to build a robot to learn how the fastest snakes on land worked. Most snakes benefit from scales that can grip surfaces and essentially offer traction in the same way that the treads on a car’s tires would. But sidewinders occupy the Sonoran and Mojave Deserts throughout Mexico and the American Southwest. Here, the steep dunes and gritty sand offer the challenge that it would take a family sedan desert off-road racing. Rather than dig into the sand as researchers originally hypothesized, they instead adjusted their angle to press as much of their body against the sand as possible. It’s a tactic that keeps even the tallest dune stable and lets the sidewinder keep as much “rubber on the road” as possible. Ideally, sidewinder rattlesnakes don’t even have to chase their prey. They’re ambush predators that hide in the sand up to their necks.

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AZ Animals is a growing team of animals experts, researchers, farmers, conservationists, writers, editors, and — of course — pet owners who have come together to help you better understand the animal kingdom and how we interact.

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It’s human nature to assume that our sophisticated bodies with highly developed brains and dexterous digits are the peak of evolution, but there’s a reason that snakes have continued to populate our imaginations and our fears throughout history and across practically every civilization. Snakes evolved millions of years before mammals, and they posed a particularly dangerous threat to these warm-blooded animals because they were ideal ambush predators: both innocuous and quick. Their form factor allowed them to blend easily into practically any environment and move swiftly without notice. And that simplicity of design — when combined with their uniquely hinged jaws — produced a predator that could prey on animals that were seemingly well outside its weight class.

Today, green anacondas can eat anything from wild deer to domesticated sheep. But with the introduction of venom, snakes were killing even the largest animals with their bite. An increasing body of research indicates that primates developed a more sophisticated sense of sight because of threats from snakes, and we appear to share an innate genetic aversion to snakes with our fellow primates.

In turn, snakes evolved their adaptations, and natural selection tended to prioritize adaptations that maximize that inherent advantage of speed. As pure carnivores who are also ambush predators, any minute alteration to strike speed could make the difference between slithering to home with a full belly or potentially being stomped or clawed to death. Ground speed was often less important, particularly with species that had the advantage of good camouflage. But it’s only natural that many snakes saw their environments sharpen their already agile bodies with new advantages. Considering there are more than 3,000 snake species with populations on every continent except Antarctica, these adaptations are quite diverse. Few of us need to fear death from snakes in the way our ancestors did, but that doesn’t make these cold-blooded creatures any less impressive.

Here are eight of the fastest snakes in the world.

#8: Black Mamba — Africa’s Fastest Moving Snakes

Ground Speed: 12 Miles Per Hour

Black mambas are both terrestrial and arboreal.

iStock.com/Nicole_Marschall

If a speed of 12 miles per hour doesn’t sound too fast compared to the record-setting sidewinder rattlesnake, imagine a 14-foot long snake barreling towards you at that speed. Being large and highly poisonous leaves these snakes with few natural predators despite inhabiting environments ranging from grasslands to forests. The black mamba will typically move in sprints between the ground and low canopies if possible using a dipping motion that’s unique to most snakes and particularly stunning given the sheer size of this giant serpent. As long as they can sneak up on it, prey like squirrels and mice rarely stand a chance. That’s because the black mamba combines that exceptional ground speed with a venom poisonous enough to kill a human with just two drops.

#7: Common Death Adder — Australia’s Fastest Striking Snakes

Strike Speed: 100 milliseconds

The common death adder has the longest fangs of any venomous Australian snake.

iStock.com/Ken Griffiths

When we mentioned that few people today have to think every day about snake bites, we weren’t talking about Australia. The death adder earned its name because it combines adept camouflage, highly toxic venom, and an incredibly fast bite. In just a tenth of a second, the common death adder can inject their poison and return their jaw to the active attack position. While over half of venomous attacks on humans will lead to death if left untreated, roughly half of bites are dry bites and there is an antivenom. Death adder habitats stretch across much of eastern and southern Australia, where their ambush tactics make them a serious threat to prey like rodents. Ironically, it could also contribute to the low incidence of common death adder attacks on humans. Death adders have no interest in humans, and their capable skills as hunters mean people will rarely ever sneak upon them.

#6: Southern Black Racer — The World’s Fastest Non-Venomous Snakes

Ground Speed: 8-10 Miles Per Hour

The southern black racer is a subspecies of the Coluber constrictor.

iStock.com/Sunshower Shots

Constrictors are typically some of the slowest snake species on Earth, but the Southern black racer is too small and its ambitions too big to allow it to lay in wait and slowly squeeze its prey to death. Instead, it will use its speed and momentum to pin prey to the ground or trees and suffocate them to death rather than wrapping their bodies entirely around. That land speed is a necessity for evading predators as well. Racers have developed great talents for climbing and swimming as well as sprinting, but hawks have developed a keen sense of eyesight and both the momentum and accuracy to pluck a black racer right up. That’s not to say that the black racer can’t put up a fight. Researchers have observed instances where great horned owls were strangled by racers, which in turn died from injuries inflicted by the owl’s talons.

#5: Yellow-Bellied Sea Snake — The Fastest Snakes in the Water

Speed on Water: 2.5 Miles Per Hour

The yellow-bellied sea snake is found in all tropical oceanic waters except for the Atlantic Ocean.

Ken Griffiths/Shutterstock.com

All snakes are capable of swimming, but the yellow-bellied sea snake is one of several species that have adapted to live their whole lives in the water. Its yellow and black pattern ensures it will stand out distinctly on the waves, but that seems to be of little consequence to this snake which has no observable predators. They also have the widest distribution of any other snake species, with habitats expanding across both the Pacific and the Indian Ocean. Still, it’s rare for humans to encounter one thanks to the deeper waters in which they prefer to swim. That’s a good thing, as sea snake poison is highly venomous. The yellow-bellied sea snake uses to chase prey consisting almost entirely of fish, and they’ve adjusted to the briny waters they inhabit thanks to an ingenious evolution that allows it to filter freshwater from the saline ocean surface.

#4: King Cobra — The Snakes With the Fastest Killing Poison

Time to Kill a Human: 30 Minutes

The king cobra is the longest venomous snake.

iStock.com/takeo1775

The longest venomous snake in the world is such a lethal killer that they’ve taken to making other cobras their prey. Their venom is a unique blend of different toxins — but they can inject roughly a quarter of an ounce into their victims with their needle-sharp teeth. Few animals have immunity from this toxin, meaning that the king cobra has few natural enemies. One exception is the mongoose, a feisty little mammal that’s known for facing down the king cobra. Mongoose is typically three feet long, while king cobras can reach a staggering length of 18 feet. Mongoose isn’t immune to the toxin that cobras produce, but they do have a resistance that allows them to stay in the fight even if they’re a bit. Both animals are lightning quick, and a fight on land could go either way.

#3: Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake — The Fastest Strike Speed in America

Strike Speed: 2.95 Meters Per Second

The Eastern diamondback rattlesnake was a symbol on one of the first flags of the United States.

iStock.com/NajaShots

For ambush predators, being able to reach high movement speeds on land isn’t always a necessity, but a fraction of a millisecond can mean the difference between life and death. The Eastern diamondback rattlesnake’s fangs can cover over six feet in less than a second, and it can strike out at a length up to two-thirds of its entire body length. A fight isn’t what this snake is looking for. Once its prey has been injected with poison, the diamondback will let it wander off to die and follow at its leisure. Mammalian prey can range in size from mice to rabbits. The rattle serves as a way to warn off potential predators before striking.

#2: Rat Snake — The Fastest Strike Speed of a Nonvenomous Snake

Strike Speed: 2.67 Meters Per Second

Black rat snakes are one of the longest snakes in North America.

iStock.com/slowmotiongli

Strike speed can make a big difference for venomous snakes that simply need to inject their prey with a single bite — but the science journalism community is more interested in why a snake that produces no venom and constricts its prey to death would need a strike speed of nearly that of a diamondback. It may have contradicted common conceptions about how venomous and nonvenomous snakes developed in tandem, but it makes sense when you consider that the constriction process can kill prey in just a matter of seconds. It’s a reminder that predators and prey are in a constant evolutionary arms race — and it’s a race that’s often measured in fractions of a second.

#1: Sidewinder — The World’s Fastest Moving Snakes

Ground Speed: 18 Miles Per Hour

The sidewinder is also known as the horned rattlesnake.

iStock.com/Josh Mitchell

The unique way the sidewinder rattlesnake moves is critical to achieving its incredible top speed, but scientists had to build a robot to learn how the fastest snakes on land worked. Most snakes benefit from scales that can grip surfaces and essentially offer traction in the same way that the treads on a car’s tires would. But sidewinders occupy the Sonoran and Mojave Deserts throughout Mexico and the American Southwest. Here, the steep dunes and gritty sand offer the challenge that it would take a family sedan desert off-road racing. Rather than dig into the sand as researchers originally hypothesized, they instead adjusted their angle to press as much of their body against the sand as possible. It’s a tactic that keeps even the tallest dune stable and lets the sidewinder keep as much “rubber on the road” as possible. Ideally, sidewinder rattlesnakes don’t even have to chase their prey. They’re ambush predators that hide in the sand up to their necks.

Next Up: 13 Products Made From Honey (Some Will Surprise You!)

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