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Invasive snake is surviving in Britain by living in attics and walls

Britain should be too cold for the invasive Aesculapian snake to survive, but it is thriving by exploiting the warmth of attics, wall cavities and compost heaps

By Michael Le Page

16 October 2024

The 2-metre-long Aesculapian snake is native to warmer parts of Europe

Szymon Bartosz/Alamy

Britain has only three native snakes but a fourth species, the 2-metre-long Aesculapian snake, is breeding in the wild in at least two places – by exploiting the warmth of buildings and compost heaps.

Tom Major at Bournemouth University in the UK and his colleagues have been tracking these newcomers to understand how they are surviving in this non-native habitat.

“The use of buildings for shelter and vegetation piles for egg laying appear to be…

Article amended on 18 October 2024

This article has been changed to correct the number of places the Aesculapian snake is known to be in Britain.

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