Snake breeders in Thailand say fruits and vegetables are not part of the reptiles’ natural diet, contradicting social media posts that warned that snakes occasionally bite into tomatoes, leaving small holes as they inject “poisonous substances”. While the experts told AFP the marks shown in images shared alongside the posts do not appear to have been made by snake fangs, a botanist said it is best to avoid consuming fruits or vegetables that have gaping holes.
“Precautions on consuming tomatoes, finding tomatoes with these abnormal features may lead many to question what happened to it,” read the Thai-language caption to a collage shared on Facebook on November 30, 2024.
The collage shows an image of a snake biting into a tomato and pictures of holes in tomatoes.
Its caption added that the holes may have been created by a bite from a snake, which it claimed would “occasionally bite into fruits when they are hungry”.
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“Your vigilance will protect you from intaking poisonous substances injected into fruits by animals.”