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| Mon - Thurs: 9am - 5pm |
| Fri: 9am - 11pm |
| Sat: 10am-11pm |
| Sun: 11am-5pm |
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701 N. 15th St., 2nd Flr.
St. Louis, MO 63103 |
| T: (314) 647-9594 |
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WE was thinner and shorter
than a pencil when it first arrived to the
St. Louis Children's Aquarium in May 1999.
It later grew to be almost 5 feet long and
almost as thick as a jumbo hot dog. WE was
a very inquisitive snake, but with two heads
sometimes going one direction or another
was almost like a tug of war. WE always
recognized its curators whenever they came
to check on WE, to feed WE, to change WE's
exhibit, to change WE's water or to just
give WE one of its regular misting baths.
When WE was fed at one of its two regular
feeding days at the World Aquarium, many
guests would look in awe at the amazing
feat of both heads eating. WE also got
to host 2 World Series parties for the
St. Louis Cardinals, the Boston Red Sox,
the Detroit Tigers. WE was also a big
hit at the American Association for the
Advancement of Science annual convention
in 2006. Whatever the age of the visitor
and whatever the background of the viewer,
WE always provided fascination.
WE was a very special animal. A friend
to many and loved by millions worldwide,
WE brought special attention to some of
the fascinating aspects of nature.
Like many of you, the loving and caring
staff at the World Aquarium are devastated
by the loss of WE. We ask everyone to
consider sending an email about the positive
impact WE has brought to their lives.
These emails can be sent to we@worldaquarium.org
and with your permission will be included
on our website. (Click
here to view responses)
We will fondly remember WE.
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- Had 4 eyes, 2 brains, 2 tongues and
both heads ate regularly.
- A two-headed animal, which was a conjoined
twin, can be a heritable trait especially
if the twins are fraternal and not identical.
In this case WE was a hermaphrodite, having
both a boy and girl head.
- Albinism is the lack of pigment, leaving
the albino animal with no color in its
body. The pink coloration on the body
is due to the red color of blood flowing
through the body's capillaries and veins.
- Neither head was aware that the other
was connected to a single body. This trait
is most often found in snakes. Frequently,
the two heads compete for food during
feeding time.
- When one head would eat, the other head
didn't necessarily perceive that it had
eaten but nonetheless felt the fullness
in its stomach.
- Often times the left head got dragged
along by the right head because the right
head was the dominant side. Most two headed
snakes are fully dominant on the right
side.
- Aristotle wrote a description of a two-headed
snake as long ago as the fourth century
BC.
- Abnormalities of this type are usually
caused by irregularity of egg incubation
temperature due to change in weather patterns.
- The two heads go to a single digestive
tract. The organs are not duplicated,
only the heads.
- Possessing two heads didn't seem to
be a handicap to this special snake.
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