AFP / Getty Images
This picture taken on April 10, 2013 shows a newly born two-headed pig in a village in Jiujiang, east China’s Jiangxi province.
On the heels of recent news about a two-headed bull shark, a two-head pig has been born in a village in east China’s Jianxi province, according to the news reports.
The photo shows a pig with two snouts, two ears and what appears to be a shared eye. A local veterinarian told the AFP news agency the animal is suffering a deformity and is unlikely to survive.
The deformity may be the same condition, called “axial bifurcation,” that researchers determined was the cause of the two-headed bull shark in a study published this March in Journal of Fish Biology.
It results from an embryo splitting into two separate organisms, or twins, but the process is incomplete.
“Halfway through the process of forming twins, the embryo stops dividing,” Michael Wagner, a researcher at Michigan State University, told LiveScience.
The mutation, he added, occurs across animals, including humans.
While rare, in addition to the pig shown here and the shark, two-headed turtles, snakes, kittens, and other critters have been reported in recent years.
John Roach is a contributing writer to NBC News. To learn more about him, visit his website.
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