5
   

Herps--reptiles and amphibians

 
 
hightor
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Dec, 2017 05:54 am
http://www.chicagonow.com/greenamajigger/files/2012/08/search.jpeg

An albino two-headed milk snake
0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Dec, 2017 11:07 pm
http://cdn.newsapi.com.au/image/v1/a2d56b97f67b6a0d5c03fb75fc5739fe?width=1024
This red-bellied black snake was found trapped inside a soft drink can. earlier this year.

Red-bellied black found in a soft drink can prompts warning about the start of Sydney’s snake season
Sean Thompson, Wentworth Courier
September 28, 2015 10:13pm


COUNCIL workers were given the fright of their life when they found a red-bellied black snake hanging out the end of a soft drink in Waverley.

The snake’s discovery on a busy roadside earlier this year has prompted calls for pet owners to be mindful of the potentially deadly creatures in their backyard.

Professional reptile wrangler Sean Cade said warmer temperatures meant an increase in snake activity.

“Red-bellied blacks and brown snakes are common in the eastern suburbs,” he said.

“The one I found got caught after chasing a tiny frog inside the can. A snake’s scales only go in one direction, so once it was in the can it couldn’t get back out.

“I collected the snake and took it home to cut the can from its head before releasing it back into the bush.”

Mr Cade, who operates Australian Snake Catchers, said the trapped snake was a reminder for motorists not to throw rubbish from the car.

“Food scraps attract rodents which in turn bring out more snakes, and stuff like soft drink cans can cause injury and even death.”


Mr Cade needed plyers to cut the snake out of the soft drink can. Picture: Supplied


Despite misconceptions about Sydney’s east having a small snake population, Mr Cade said he was always busy in that part of the city.

A recently fed diamond python was also captured in a garden in Matraville and a green tree snake in Randwick.

The Australian Veterinary Association said warmer weather and dryer conditions brought snakes out of winter hibernation at this time of year.

Sean Cade operates Snake Catchers Australia, and is called across Sydney to catch slippery serpents.
AVA president Robert Johnson said snakes were most active at the end of the day but pet owners should stay aware of what their animals were doing at all times.

“Snakes in sheds are probably looking for mice or rats, so keeping your shed clean can help to avoid the problem of snakes sneaking up on pets,” he said.

“They tend to be attracted to areas where there’s a good supply of rats and mice, wood piles and piles of rubbish.


“Outside, keep a close eye for snakes in bushy areas or near water. It’s best to try to keep horses, cattle and sheep away from bushy areas if possible.

Dr Johnson said dogs reacted to snake bites faster than cats.


This diamond python, presumably someone’s pet, was found with a possum in its belly at Matraville.
SNAKE BITE SIGNS IN PETS
● Sudden weakness followed by collapse

● Bleeding puncture wound

● Swelling in the bitten area


● Pain and discomfort

● Neurological signs such as twitching, drooling and shaking

● Vomiting

● Loss of bladder and bowel control

● Dilated pupils

● Paralysis

● Bite signs in horses, sheep and cattle include muscle tremor, laboured breathing and dilated pupils followed by paralysis.

izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 02:11 am
@coluber2001,
I had a packet of nuts like that.

https://www.tintoyarcade.com/image/cache/data/product/Images_5400_5499/TTA5454-Snake-Can-Whistles-UK-01-323x520.jpg
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 11:22 am
@izzythepush,
LOL almost as deadly as a red-bellied black snake.
0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 02:46 pm
http://i.pinimg.com/736x/d4/73/e3/d473e3204a312253fb2659f41474b65a.jpg
Red-bellied black snake Pseudechis porphyriacus acting like a cobra with its dorsal-ventral flattening of the neck. I kind of like this snake. It's one of my favorites of the Australian elapids.
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 02:53 pm
@coluber2001,
http://www.australiazoo.com.au/conservation/wildlife-warriors/patient-of-the-week/images/potw_257.jpg
They seem to have a habit of getting their head stuck in soft drink cans.

http://www.aqob.com.au/images/product/detail/Red%20belly%20black.jpg
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 03:03 pm
@coluber2001,
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/00/c0/f8/00c0f845b6c79b1432cd040585d3f09b--lizards-snakes.jpg
This guy likes them too. It looks like a red-bellied black snake. They must have a good temperament.
0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 03:17 pm
My pet red belly black snake

https://youtu.be/1HlNge2y1YA


If that one doesn't work try this one.
my pet red belly black snake
https://www.bing.com/search?q=my+pet+red+belly+black+snake&setmkt=en-US

coluber2001
 
  2  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 03:31 pm
@coluber2001,
My new pet red-bellied black snake, "cuddles".

https://youtu.be/1H1MrWTdyTo
roger
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 04:07 pm
@coluber2001,
Hey! They both worked
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 04:17 pm
@roger,
For some reason just one of them, the long one, worked for me.

That one guy killed me. The guy with the pet snake named cuddly who said he would change it if you don't like it. He seemed like a likeable fellow.
Besides, he likes snakes. That helps.
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 07:15 pm
@coluber2001,
Iguana named Bruce responds to a man calling him.

Watch "Lizard Greets Man like a Dog!" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/p-zGIS-WWZQ

Watch "Lizard Greets Man Like A Dog 2" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/UDyG2fI-cIo
0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Dec, 2017 07:29 pm
Another Australian loves his red-bellied black snakes. "Black snakes are magnificent. If you don't like black snakes you're racist."

Red bellied black snakes - YouTube
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=U-LOBvVCReI
0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Dec, 2017 11:49 am
Here's a video of a man sprawled on the couch watching television with his large black-throated monitor lounging on him. Black-throated monitors are named Varanus albigularis. Albigularis means white throat, so why is he called a black-throated monitor?

Watch "Watching T.V. with my Giant Black Throat Monitor=bigboy3293" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/0Bno-qsnbUA
0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Dec, 2017 01:25 pm
How Not To Die In Australia Part 1: Snakes
One of the main things Australia is famous for is its legions of deadly animals – snakes, spiders and various sea creatures – waiting to bite, poison and generally cause misery. It’s definitely one of the things I spent time fretting about before I came here, especially seen as Queensland has almost all of them. I decided to “know my enemy”, and actually found it quite interesting, mainly because animals as exotic and exciting as these don’t exist in England!

How Not To Die In Australia Part 1: Snakes | Unbridled Optimist
https://unbridledoptimist.wordpress.com/2011/07/30/how-not-to-die-in-australia-snakes/

Shared via Bing Search
https://aka.ms/getbingandroid
0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Dec, 2017 10:54 pm
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/11/11/1415744886478_wps_1_EXCLUSIVE_A_red_bellied_b.jpg

Truckie saves red-bellied black snake from certain death after finding the serpent stuck in a drink can by side of M7 in Horsely Park
IAN WALKER, The Daily Telegraph
November 10, 2014 8:58pm

A THIRSTY snake in need of a pick me up got its head stuck in an energy drink can.

A passing truck driver found the red belly black snake in a spot of bother on the side of the M7 in Horsley Park last Friday.

WIRES who were able to cut the snake free have urged people to be mindful of the litter they leave on the side of roads.

“The snake has probably gone into the can because it was a little bit dehydrated then got itself stuck,” a WIRES spokeswoman said.

“The driver decided he wasn’t going to leave it there so he put it in a bag and took it with him. “Our rescuer picked it up from him and cut it out of the can and released it.

“It’s healthy and didn’t have any cuts around its head which is really lucky. It’s really important for people to remember when they’re leaving rubbish around that this can happen.”

As for why the snake put its head in the can — it looked like a nice place to escape the traffic.

“Snakes are inquisitive and this snake was probably looking for a safe place to hide on a busy road,” the spokeswoman said.

“Unfortunately, the place it chose wasn’t wide enough or deep enough for it and it got trapped in the can.”

If you see a snake in trouble or if you need help or advice please call WIRES on 1300 094 737.

A truck driver saved a red-bellied black snake caught in a drink can from certain death.
0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Sat 30 Dec, 2017 12:10 pm
Another video with an Australian guy handling and discussing the poisonous red-bellied black snake.

https://youtu.be/6CUDLg8089A
0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2018 02:24 pm

YELLOW-BELLIED SEA SNAKE. CREDIT: ALOAIZA
NOT EXACTLY ROCKET SCIENCE

A Blog by Ed Yong

The Sad Tale of the Thirsty, Dehydrated Sea Snake

POSTED TUE, 03/18/2014
It is the bitterest of ironies that a snake which spends its entire life at sea, constantly submerged in water, should spend months on end being thirsty and dehydrated.

Fresh water quenches thirst. Salt water worsens it. If you drink seawater, your kidneys try to get rid of the excess salt by diluting it in urine, and you expel more water than you take in. The same applies to other land animals, and those that return to the sea have special adaptations for coping with salt. Many sea animals avoid swallowing seawater entirely, and get fresh water from the food they eat. Turtles, sea birds and marine iguanas have special glands for getting rid of salt.

Sea snakes have similar glands under their tongues. When Harvey Lillywhite from the University of Florida started studying these serpents a few decades ago, all the textbooks said that they used these glands to get rid of salt.

But that explanation didn’t add up. For a start, Lillywhite found it very hard to keep one of these gland-bearing species in full seawater—they would often become very dehydrated. Later, he discovered that three species of sea kraits refuse to drink seawater even when they become dehydrated. In the lab, they always choose fresh water. In the wild, they tend to stick close to sources of fresh water, like springs or rainy spots. It looked like their ability to process salt was a myth.

Sea kraits are well adapted for life in the ocean, but they return to land to lay their eggs. The yellow-bellied sea snake, however, is completely marine. This beautiful creature, with its black and yellow body and paddle tail, hunts at sea and gives birth to live young at sea. It’s the only species of sea snake to live in the open ocean. Surely, these snakes would have some way of coping with salt?

Lillywhite started studying this species in 2009, at a site off the coast of Costa Rica. “We’ve looked at hundreds,” he says. “No sea snake we’ve observed has drunk any seawater.”

They only stick to the fresh stuff, but the amount they drink varies throughout the year. These snakes live in a place that goes through drought from November to May. If they were captured during these dry spells, they betrayed their thirst by sipping heavily from fresh water; if they were caught in wetter months, they barely drank. “If the snake drinks fresh water, it’s thirsty,” says Lillywhite. “If it’s thirsty, it’s dehydrated, and if it’s dehydrated, it’s not doing what the textbooks said.”

The team also found that the snakes had significantly less water in their bodies than in the dry months than in the wet ones. Despite having a salt gland and being surrounded in water, the snakes are thirsty and dehydrated for months on end. Lillywhite thinks that they cope by having an unusually high amount of water in their bodies to begin with. They might also have adaptations that help them to lose water slowly, and to withstand the effects of dehydration.

In the wild, it is possible that the snakes use deep springs or estuaries, but they are incredibly widespread and Lillywhite has never found any evidence of them congregating in specific sites.

Instead, rain brings them salvation. When it falls over the ocean, it doesn’t mix with the seawater straight away. Instead, it forms a layer that is either fresh or only mildly salty. If the conditions are right, these “freshwater lenses” can be both deep and persistent. And the yellow-bellied sea snake, it seems, drinks from them.

Lillywhite thinks that it should be easy for them to find such lenses because they regularly surface to breathe. They might also be able to sense the changes in pressure that accompany a storm, and head for areas where rain is likely to fall. “When you scuba dive you can sort of tell when it’s raining,” he says. “I think the snakes can too.”

And if rain never falls, the snakes may not survive. Many sea snakes that were once abundant off the coast of Northern Australia have mysteriously started to vanish. Eight species are locally extinct. There are many possible causes, but Lillywhite notes that this part of Australia has recently suffered from a prolonged drought. Perhaps the lack of falling fresh water contributed to their downfall? Perhaps, surrounded by water, these sea snakes died of thirst.

Reference: Lillywhite, Sheehy, Brischoux & Grech. 2014. Pelagic sea snakes dehydrate at sea. Proc Roy Soc B http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2014.0119

0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  2  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2018 04:55 pm
DAILY NEWS 16 November 2005

Lizards’ poisonous secret is revealed
ByLizards’ poisonous secret is revealed Emma Young

Monitor lizards – commonly kept as pets – and iguanas produce venom, according to surprising new research that is rewriting the story of lizard and snake evolution.

Until now, nasty swellings and excessive bleeding as a result of a lizard bite were blamed on infection from the bacteria in the creatures’ mouths. Venom had been considered the preserve of advanced snakes and just two species of lizard – the gila monster and the Mexican beaded lizard. And scientists had thought these lizards evolved venom production independent of snakes.

But research Bryan Fry’s team at the University of Melbourne, Australia, now suggests that venomous lizards are much more widespread than anyone realised. Furthermore venomous lizards and snakes are in fact descended from a common ancestor that lived about 200 million years ago.

In a related paper published in the journal CR Biologies this week, two of Fry’s co-authors, Nicolas Vidal and Blair Hedges of Pennsylvania State University, US, christen this new toxic taxonomic clade Toxicofera. They also suggest a complete overhaul of the conventional classification of lizards and snakes, based on new DNA analysis.


“These are very exciting papers,” says Harry Greene, a herpetologist at Cornell University, US. “They threaten to radically change our concepts of lizard and snake evolution, and particularly of venom evolution.”

Fossil record
DNA analysis by Fry’s team suggests that the closest relatives of snakes are iguanians, of which there are about 1440 species, and anguimorphs, a group that includes the two lizard species already known to be venomous, plus monitor lizards. The team found toxin-producing oral glands in species belonging to these two lineages, but not in other lineages.

The genetic work, which agrees with the fossil record, suggests venomous snakes and lizards shared a common ancestor 200 million years ago, pushing the evolution of venom systems 100 million years further into the past. The evolution of venom coincides with the rapid spread of small mammals.

Analysis of the differing toxins produced by these lizards showed that nine types are shared with snakes. “To find the classic rattlesnake toxins in the bearded dragon – a hugely popular pet – was a huge surprise,” Fry says. But some of the lizard toxins are novel, and are now prime candidates for investigation for potential new drugs.

Red herring
But how could venom production in these lizards have previously been overlooked? Fry suggests that blaming bacteria had become dogma. The Komodo dragon – a monitor lizard – will eat carrion, and their mouths are teeming with bacteria. “It was the classic red herring,” Fry says. Also, while the toxins produced by these lizards might kill their usual prey, they have a less potent effect on people.

In the CR Biologies paper, Vidal and Hedges expand on the genetic analysis. They compared the sequences of nine nuclear protein-coding genes from 19 groups representing all the main lineages of lizards and snakes.

The results reposition iguanas and their close relatives from the lowest, most recent branches of the evolutionary tree to the uppermost branches, close to snakes. But the paper also fundamentally re-classifies lizards and snakes, with a number of new taxonomic groups.

The old system that has been used for 80 years was based primarily on the texture of the tongue. “But we have shown this to be a bad character. Instead, we identified other characters that agree with the molecular phylogeny, such as venom and egg teeth,” Hedges says.

Journal reference: Nature (DOI: 10.1038/nature04328)

39
0 Replies
 
coluber2001
 
  1  
Reply Sun 7 Jan, 2018 01:00 am
Japanese man and his pet caiman.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=LXEcf6Ef1CU
 

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