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How to keep from Getting Snake-Bit By Tim Anderson

How to keep from Getting Snake-Bit By Tim Anderson. Objective:. Don’t get bit by a snake. Strategy #1. Avoidance(Don’t be in the same place as a Snake). Strategy #1. How to avoid Snakes: Stay out of and don’t create Snake Habitat:

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How to keep from Getting Snake-Bit By Tim Anderson

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  1. How to keep from Getting Snake-Bit By Tim Anderson

  2. Objective: Don’t get bit by a snake

  3. Strategy #1 • Avoidance(Don’t be in the same place as a Snake)

  4. Strategy #1 How to avoid Snakes: Stay out of and don’t create Snake Habitat: Overhead cover/shade (canebreaks, brush thickets, rocky areas, slash piles, holes, logs, leaf litter, river and creek banks,etc.) near sunny areas and prey concentrations (rodents, frogs, lizards, birds, and fish).

  5. Activities that create Snake Habitat: • Piling debris • Attracting snake prey(providing food for rodents or birds, creating ditches or pools that might be inhabited by frogs or fish)

  6. Strategy #2 Don’t mess with snakes

  7. Strategy #3 Dispose of Snakes

  8. Does the snake present a significant threat?Venomous VS Non-venomous

  9. Western Diamondback Rattler Massasuga Rattler

  10. Timber Rattler Cotton Mouth Water Moccasin

  11. Copperhead Texas Coral Snake

  12. Non-poisonous snakes tend to look like the poisonous ones. This helps to protect the non-poisonous snake. Some examples from Texas: Big bend milk snake Mexican milk snake Texas long nose snake Texas lyre snake

  13. Coral Snake  Big bend Milk Snake  Mexican Milk Snake Texas long nose snake

  14. Snake Disposal Methods: • Beat it to death with a Long-Handled implement (shovel, hoe, etc.) • Crush it with a large rock thrown from a safe distance. • Shooting- Don’t shoot at snakes if the shot poses a greater threat than the snake! • Others? • Exercise caution when handling snake carcasses

  15. Questions?????

  16. Texas Lyre Snake Western Diamondback Rattlesnake   Timber Rattlesnake

  17. Pit Vipers

  18. Pit Vipers • The name comes from the depression/pit in the maxillary bone. It sits between the nose and eye, but a little lower. • The pit is believed to be a heat sensing organ that help the snake to detect it’s prey. Especially at night. • It is believed that the pit also helps the snake to determine the amount of venom to release by how much heat the prey emits.

  19. Elliptical pupil and Nostril Pit

  20. Pit Vipers • Other identifiable characteristics: • vertical elliptical pupils • Triangular head • Most have “rattles”. One rattle per skin slough. Rattles are to let you know you are in the vicinity of the snake. Rattle increases the closer you get to the snake. • Two part tongue used for smell.

  21. Pit Vipers • The fangs of a pit viper are at the front of the jaw and are “hinged”. They fold backward against the roof of the mouth when not in use. • The venom apparatus consists of a gland and hollow duct connected to the fangs. • Pit vipers are most active between April and October.

  22. Pit Vipers • The venom is composed of hydrolytic enzymes and proteins designed to immobilize, kill and digest its prey. • Hydrolytic enzymes cause the red blood cells to break down and affect the clotting mechanism of the blood, leading to necrosis and infarction of the tissue. • Depending on the amount of venom injected, the venom can cause various toxic effects on the blood and other tissues.

  23. Pit Vipers • Venom can cause: • Hemolysis (breakdown of red blood cells and the release of hemoglobin) • Intravascular coagulation • Convulsions • Acute renal failure • secondary bleeding can lead to hypovolemic shock from coagulation defects and massive swelling.

  24. Pit Vipers • The snake can release any quantity of venom on any given strike. From none to the entire amount in the glands. • Bites are usually on the legs or hands • 20% of bites do not result in envenomation • Pit viper bites have a distinctive two puncture holes with teeth abrasions.

  25. Pit Vipers • Pit vipers strike is lightning fast. Depending on the snake, the striking stance is different.

  26. Pit Viper • A severe bite form a pit viper can result in death from shock within 30 minutes • Most deaths occur from 6 to 30 hours after the bite.

  27. Signs and Symptoms Fang Marks Swelling and pain at bite marks Oozing at bite Weakness, dizziness, or fainting Sweating and/or chills Thirst Nausea and Vomiting Diarrhea Tachycardia and hypotension Bloody urine and GI hemorrhage (late) Shallow Resp. progressing to failure Numbness and tingling around face and head (classic) Metallic taste in mouth Pit Vipers

  28. Pit Viper • Management • Bring the snake to the hospital for identification DEAD. If possible or practical. Do not delay patient care to find the snake. • ABC’s • EKG and IV • Immobilize bite • Lymphatic constricting bands • DO NOT USE ICE PACKS OR COLD PACK • In hospital - antivenom

  29. Western Diamondback Rattlesnake • Holds first place for most serious bites and highest fatalities in US. • Average three to four feet in length, but have been know to grow to seven feet in length. • Has a rattle which grows longer after each molt. Used to scare off intruders. • Life span of about 15 years. • Young are born with fangs and venom intact.

  30. Western Diamondback Rattlesnake • They are aggressive and excitable. • When alarmed they make a sound that resembles a sudden burst of steam. • Hibernate in groups. • Hibernation in colder habitats are in holes and tunnels of burrowing mammals. • Hibernation in warmer habitats are in rock crevices and they hibernate in small groups.

  31. Western Diamondback Rattlesnake • They are nocturnal hunters. • They inhabit area such as dry, rocky, shrub-covered terrain and conceal themselves inside crevices in the rocks. • They will stand their ground when disturbed. • In a defensive posture they will raise their head and loop the neck up high above it’s coils. This gives it a better striking position.

  32. Western Diamondback Rattlesnake • Lidless eyes that are protected by an outer skin. • Has alternating bands of black and white that are of equal width in the tail. • Brown diamond shaped markings are found along the middle of the rattler’s back.

  33. Western Diamondback Rattlesnake - Variations Albino Western Diamondback Rattlesnake Melanistic Western Diamondback Rattlesnake

  34. Massasauga Rattlesnake • Average about 3 feet in length • Life span of about 14 years • Young are born with fangs and venom intact. • Fangs are about 5.0 to 5.9 mm in length. • Eyes have an elliptical pupil. • They are nocturnal in the hot months • Often seen basking on rocks.

  35. Massasauga Rattlesnake • Hibernation sites include rock crevices, rodent and crayfish burrows, old stumps, and rotten logs. • Can survive a freezing body temperature for short periods of time without harm. • Reports describe the Massasauga as sluggish and mild-mannered or very alert and irritable. All should be considered Extremely dangerous.

  36. Massasauga Rattlesnake • They will rattle their tail and strike if someone comes to close. • They inhabit areas such as swamps, marshes, bogs, wetlands and wet prairies. • They are also found in open sunny areas with elevated basking areas.

  37. Massasauga Rattlesnake • Grey to brown bodies with dark blotches down their back. • Tail is ringed with alternating dark or light bands

  38. Timber Rattlesnake • Average about 3 to 6 feet in length. • Maximum life span of 30 years. • Newborns are equipped with 2.6mm long fangs and venom intact. • Adults have fangs 8.7 - 10.4 mm in length. They can replace fangs if lost or broken. • They will hibernate in large groups. • They may migrate for miles to specific hibernation locations.

  39. Timber Rattlesnake • Their dens are rock crevices in south facing slopes, mammal burrows and large hollow logs. • They will retreat if disturbed. If cornered, they will form a loose coil with head raised and strike when the intruder is close. They will coil and strike with the rattle active the whole time.

  40. Timber Rattlesnakes • They are mild tempered compared to other rattlesnakes, but are still extremely dangerous. • They are ambush predators that “sit and wait” for prey.

  41. Timber Rattlesnake • The head is yellow and unmarked. • Tail is always black. • Belly is white gray with dark flecks. • Has black or brown crossbands on a yellow or brown body.

  42. Cottonmouth Water Moccasin • Average length up to six feet. • Young are born with fangs and venom intact. • Stubby, muscular snake. • They rarely stray from water. • Moccasins can bite underwater, However, they cannot strike underwater due to the water resistance..

  43. Cottonmouth Water Moccasin • Most commonly found in marshes, swamps, ponds, shallow lakes, ditches and canals, slow moving streams. • They are very defensive and aggressive. They will stand their ground or even approach its aggressor. • They will readily vibrate their tail when provoked and can make make an impressive “rattling” sound against leaves, water or solid objects.

  44. Cottonmouth Water moccasin • Their mouths will snap shut when touched like a trap. Hence, the nickname “Trapjaw”. • Their powerful jaws support the snake latching on, rather than a strike and release, when biting.

  45. Cottonmouth Water Moccasin • Body is brown, olive or blackish in color. • With a lighter belly and crossbands extending all the way down around and across its belly. • They have a dark stripe on their cheek that runs through the eye.

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