When two employees at the East Bay Vivarium in Berkeley, California, pulled a baby snake from the incubator seven months ago, they must have thought they were seeing double. The hatchling was a California kingsnake (Lampropeltis californiae), a white non-venomous snake with black splotchesâand two heads.Â

The snake is an example of conjoined twins, when two babies are born fused together, sharing a varying degree of organs. In this case, the snake appears to have one set of functioning organs with a second head thatâs âkind of along for the ride,â Johnathan Emberton, owner of the East Bay Vivarium, tells Popular Science. While the extra head is definitely sentientâit breathes, looks around, flicks its tongue, and apparently gets mad if you poke itâit doesnât eat.
âThe dominant head is the only one thatâs eaten,â he explains. âThe other one shows a little interest [in the food], but really hasnât even tried to eat.â The team at the vivarium theorizes that the non-dominant head doesnât control any of the organs, and that its esophagus ends where the two bodies meet.Â

While the birth of conjoined twins is unusual, itâs not unheard of. In the past 35 years, the East Bay Vivarium has seen other snakes, as well as tortoises, turtles, and geckos, hatch with two heads. Whatâs rare about this particular snake is that at seven months old, itâs already lived significantly longer than all the other sets of conjoined twins.Â
âItâs very rare that you hatch one at all, and then itâs extremely rare when they live,â Emberton says. With conjoined twins, âyou might have two sets of hearts and two sets of lungs and two sets of stomachs, which all are either competing against one another or one needs to support the other.â For this reason, the snake is lucky to have been born with just one main male body. âIf it had two sets of functioning organs, we probably wouldnât be talking today. And it would probably be in an alcohol jar.âÂ

In fact, the vivariumâs staff only told the world about their special snake back in March, when it had turned six months old. Once the snake reaches its first birthday later this year, the team will start thinking about its potential next home.Â
According to Emberton, the snake doesnât miss a meal and, surprisingly, doesnât have too many issues shedding. The team calls it Zeke and Angel, in honor of the employees who pulled it out of the incubator, but there is an âan ongoing contention about whoâs who,â Emberton laughs. âYouâll have to argue with those two.âÂ