O great! Thanks for this one!!!
Found a very informative website:
Snake info.
Extracts from this website that I found very interesting:
Quote:
Snakes do not usually attack humans unless they are surprised or cornered. Snakes will usually first warn off the human. Only a careless movement will stimulate the snake to strike.
Snakes prefer not to bite. Their venom is their precious ammunition for hunting. They will usually give many warnings before wasting venom or risking danger by actually biting a provoker. WTM, suppose the rinkhals decided that you are not worthy of his precious venom
Warnings include
Baring fangs: Opening the mouth wide, displaying teeth.
Making warning noises: hissing, spitting, vibrating vegetation
Getting into strike position: The classic S-shape. Some harmless snakes make false strikes with their mouths closed. Most venomous snakes make a few false strikes before actually biting.
And many that do bite usually don't inject their precious venom ("dry bites").
Quote:
Safety bite: A snake doesn't kill because it is mean and evil. It kills so that it doesn't get injured by its prey. A snake is quite a fragile creature with a delicate skull and thin teeth and lots and lots of ribs that can break. A struggling prey is not only dangerous when it is being caught, but also when it is being swallowed
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Some snakes hibernate in large groups at the same place every year, travelling long distances to go back to such a spot{so I suppose they DO have a sense of direction} This is common at high altitudes. ……Sometimes, good dens are so scarce that a wide variety of animals hibernate in the same spot. In Finland, one spot had toads, frogs, slow worms, lizards, grass snakes, bats and adders all snuggling together!
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Pythons are among the best egg-laying mamas. They not only coil around their eggs, but if the temperature falls, will "shiver" to raise the body temperature and keep the eggs warm.
The Mud Snake (Farancia abacura) a harmless snake, often lays in an alligator nest so her eggs have a fierce guardian from predators.
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Longest Snake: The Reticulated Python (Python Reticulatus) was recognised as the longest snake with the maximum verified length of 10.1 meters (almost as long as a bus!).
The fastest snake: is believed to be the black mamba of Africa. It is reputed to be able to travel up to 14-19 km/h in short bursts.
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Are snake predators immune to snake venom?
.. Other snake-eaters which have developed resistance include: mongoose, some rats and hedgehogs, meerkats.
Even domestic cats are resistant to cobras.
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A snake doesn't get more bones as it grows. It gets longer because its bones (and muscles) get bigger. Snakes do grow longer continuously, but more slowly as they mature and imperceptibly as they near adult size.
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Treatment of snakebite?
DON'TS
Don't incise and suck the wound.
Don't apply an arterial tourniquet.
Don't cool the area of the bite.
Don't try to catch the snake, we do not need another victim.
Don't give the victim alcoholic drinks. Not even the odd Amarulla on the way to the hospital :roll: