Spider-tailed horned viper: meet the "snake in spider's clothing" that fools its prey into a shocking death

Spider-tailed horned viper: meet the "snake in spider's clothing" that fools its prey into a shocking death

This is surely a contender for the world's weirdest – and trickiest – snake.

Published: September 27, 2024 at 1:47 pm

Over the mountains near the western Iranian desert, a peckish migrating lark spots a welcome sight: a big, juicy spider, out in the open like a pie on a windowsill. The lark descends upon the naive arachnid, little claws outstretched. And then: WHAP!

The meal-seeker has become the meal, trapped in the jaws of an enormous snake. The lark’s would-be snack was not a real bug but an anatomical forgery: the incredible appendage of the spider-tailed horned viper (Pseudocerastes urarachnoides), surely one of the world's weirdest snakes.

Spider-tailed horned viper
The spider-tailed horned viper is a species of snake endemic to western Iran. It uses its strange tail tip to lure insectivorous birds to within striking range/Getty

Lots of predators use their own body parts to attract prey: Anglerfish grow their own glowing lures, horned toads wiggle their worm-like toes, and alligator snapping turtles make their tongues squirm.

But the bait used by the spider-tailed horned viper has a special panache. Millennia of evolution have sculpted the end of its tail into a near-perfect replica of a spider.

For a while, this snake’s jewellery was difficult for even researchers to believe: A team examining specimens in 1970 thought at first that their snake had been preserved with a small spider clinging to her tail, or that she had a tumour or parasite.

Millennia of evolution have sculpted the end of its tail into a near-perfect replica of a spider.

But further encounters and careful observation have revealed the ornament’s development and use. Baby snakes are born with normal tails; as they grow, an abdomen-like knob develops at the tail’s end, while the nearby scales splay outward until they resemble legs. 

To hunt, a viper coils up on a limestone rock and twitches her tail slightly, sending the 'spider' marching around on her well-camouflaged body until a bird or lizard falls for it.

The capture rate is not 100 percent. Researchers have seen wizened birds successfully resist the temptation of the twitching lure, as well as snakes whose spiders have lost limbs. But when it works, it’s one of the natural world’s freakiest and most impressive bait-and-switches – a snake in spider’s clothing.


This article is excerpted from Atlas Obscura: Wild Life: An Explorer’s Guide to the World’s Living Wonders by Joshua Foer & Cara Giaimo. Workman Publishing, 2024. 

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