odonata
AH senior member
I can't believe I forgot this Eastern Hognose in my earlier post. Most of the time, they're drama queens. This one was super chill when I scooped him up on the bike path:
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This one was in the wife’s back yard several years ago before she was my wife.
That is identical to the snake that started this thread! That's what it looked like.
If you get medical attention quickly you are not likely to die, but not everyone gets to a hospital in time and it can lead to various issues up to and including death. Of course, some people are more sensitive to the toxin than others and are more likely to die. There are also different species of rattle snakes, and I have read that the Mojave rattle snake is the one most likely to kill a human.I don't know whether rattlesnakes are deadly or can only seriously injure you.
In Africa, the puff adder is considered the most dangerous snake .
Others may have more concentrated venom, be more aggressive, but this one relies on its camouflage and hopes the enemy passes by and then you step on it.I know of people who have survived these bites, but it depends on the “benevolence” of the individual snake how much venom it injects into you.Not every bite is a venomous bite, not every bite is followed by a full load.
An adult puff adder has a venom volume of 130-200 milligrams.
70 milligrams is the lethal dose for an average adult human.
In Africa and Asia, 150,000 people die from snakebite every year.
Half a million suffer severe tissue damage and have no possibility or means to have this treated by a doctor.
So keep your eyes open when hunting in the bush.
I believe you are correct on the Mojave, they have a cocktail of proteins that attacks differently. Both phytotoxin and hemotoxin .If you get medical attention quickly you are not likely to die, but not everyone gets to a hospital in time and it can lead to various issues up to and including death. Of course, some people are more sensitive to the toxin than others and are more likely to die. There are also different species of rattle snakes, and I have read that the Mojave rattle snake is the one most likely to kill a human.
Or Louisiana, AFAIK.Wow, no such issues in Bama.
I believe saw scale vipers kill more people than any other snake.I don't know whether rattlesnakes are deadly or can only seriously injure you.
In Africa, the puff adder is considered the most dangerous snake .
Others may have more concentrated venom, be more aggressive, but this one relies on its camouflage and hopes the enemy passes by and then you step on it.I know of people who have survived these bites, but it depends on the “benevolence” of the individual snake how much venom it injects into you.Not every bite is a venomous bite, not every bite is followed by a full load.
An adult puff adder has a venom volume of 130-200 milligrams.
70 milligrams is the lethal dose for an average adult human.
In Africa and Asia, 150,000 people die from snakebite every year.
Half a million suffer severe tissue damage and have no possibility or means to have this treated by a doctor.
So keep your eyes open when hunting in the bush.
That's what I read. Sounds nasty. I don't have any personal.experience with them. Mostly I've dealt with Western diamond backs (a lot) and Northern Pacific rattlesnakes (minimal). I prefer to keep them at arms length plus a shotgun barrel!I believe you are correct on the Mojave, they have a cocktail of proteins that attacks differently. Both phytotoxin and hemotoxin .
We have a lot of Copperheads around my area of PA. They do smell like cucumber. We also have a healthy population of Timber Rattlers.I've definitely smelled moccasins when they were in breeding balls in creeks.
I've always heard that copperheads smell like cucumbers, I never got close enough to a live one to find that out!
This is a juvenile Snouted Cobra, males more than females can have this banded colouration.Not sure if anyone knows here but saw this pretty banded snake run over just out of
Lephalale Limpopo, buddy said it was a type of Spitting Cobra, I’m thinking Rinkhal ?
I normally get a photo holding them but was in a hurry this day.
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That’s interesting.We have a lot of Copperheads around my area of PA. They do smell like cucumber. We also have a healthy population of Timber Rattlers.
This is a juvenile Snouted Cobra, males more than females can have this banded colouration.
Rinkhals are not found that far north.
A Rinkhals species(H. nyangensis.) Thought to be extinct has been rediscovered in Zim last year but does not occur so far south.
@casey - and do they also “taste like chicken”?We have a lot of Copperheads around my area of PA. They do smell like cucumber. We also have a healthy population of Timber Rattlers.