A family in Palm Harbor recently found a rare creature in their home – a two-headed snake.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s research team shared photos of the two-headed southern black racer on social media, noting it was found by Kay Rogers and family.
FWC researchers said the phenomenon is named bicephaly – an uncommon occurrence that happens during snake embryo development. When two monozygotic twins fail to separate, it leaves the heads conjoined onto a single body.