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Members of Malaysia’s civil defence force hold a python believed to be 8 metres long and found on Penang island. Image Credit: Herme Herisyam, Malaysia’s Civil Defence Force

Kuala Lumpur: A huge python found on a construction site in Malaysia could take the record for the longest snake ever to be caught with initial estimates at eight metres.

 The reticulated python — a species found in south-east Asia and widely considered as the longest reptile species — was spotted where a flyover was being built in Paya Terubong, a district on the island and tourist haven of Penang.

Herme Herisyam from Malaysia’s civil defence force, the department that caught the snake, told the Guardian that workers from the construction site called the emergency services on Thursday and authorities took 30 minutes to trap the snake.

“It is eight metres in length and weighs about 250kg,” he said by phone.

The Guinness Book of World Records gives the honour of longest snake ever in captivity to Medusa, also a reticulated python, who lives in Missouri, US. 

She was measured at 7.67 meters in the 2011 edition and still holds the title. She is said to weigh 158.8 kg, over 90 kg lighter than the Malaysian specimen.

Medusa, who is kept on show at “The Edge of Hell Haunted House” in Kansas City, could now lose her title. That python’s length would have to be first verified by the Guinness World Records body.