In 2024, scientists announced the discovery of a newfound anaconda species in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Now, in a new nature series, filmmakers have released nail-biting, never-before-seen footage of the moment they encountered the snake in the wild.

The anaconda in the footage — which features in an episode of National Geographic’s upcoming “Pole to Pole with Will Smith” docuseries — is a female measuring 16 to 17 feet (4.9 to 5.2 meters) long, Fry estimates in the show. There is a danger she might bite, says one of the Waorani guides who helps pin down the snake, even if green anacondas aren’t venomous. Anacondas are constrictors, meaning they kill prey by wrapping their bodies tightly around it, suffocating the animal before swallowing it whole.

The Waorani capture an anaconda in Bameno, Ecuador.  (Image credit: National Geographic)

The scale sample and others taken in 2022 revealed that green anacondas, which were previously thought to all belong to one species, actually form two separate species: Eunectes murinus, the already-identified southern green anaconda, and Eunectes akayima, the newfound northern green anaconda.

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