Ophiophagy (Greek ὄφις + φαγία "snake eating") is a specialized form of feeding or alimentary behavior of animals which hunt and eat snakes. There are ophiophagous mammals (such as the skunks and the mongooses), birds (such as snake eagles, the Secretary Bird, and some hawks), lizards (such as Crotaphytus collaris), and even other snakes, such as the Central and South American mussuranas and the North American Common Kingsnake (Lampropeltis getula). The genus of the venomous King Cobra (Ophiophagus hannah) is named for this habit.
. It is also possible that the bird was a Laughing Falcon or Snake Hawk, a bird of prey which feeds almost exclusively on snakes.) The Mayans also had the legend of ophiophagy in their folklore and mythology.
Guatemala may derive its name from the Nahuatl word coactlmoctl-lan, meaning "land of the snake-eating bird." 
Christian folklore associates snakes with evil (see _New_Testament) and considers anything that destroys them good. An example for this tradition is Rudyard Kipling's short story "Rikki-Tikki-Tavi" (in The Jungle Book), in which Rikki-Tikki, a mongoose, defends a human family against a pair of evil cobras.
In Buddhist folklore, the Garudas are enemies to the Nāgas, a race of intelligent serpent- or dragon-like beings, whom they hunt.
In some regions, farmers keep ophiophagous animals as pets in order to keep their living environment clear of such snakes as cobras and pit vipers (including rattlesnakes and lanceheads) which annually claim a large number of deaths of domestic animals, such as cattle, and attacks on humans. An example is tamed mongoose in India. In the 1930s a Brazilian plan to breed and release large numbers of mussuranas for the control of pit vipers was tried but didn't work. The Butantan Institute, in São Paulo, which specializes in the production of antivenins, erected a statue of the mussurana Clelia clelia as its symbol and a tribute to its usefulness in combating venomous snake bites.