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Florida Venomous Snake Safety

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Avoiding Venomous Snakes Weather & its affects on reptile behavior. Florida s average temp. is around 72 F. Reptiles are least active when outside temps are below ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Florida Venomous Snake Safety


1
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  • Florida VenomousSnake Safety
  • Training Seminar

3
What is a Reptile?
  • Ectothermic (Cold Blooded) Thermoregulation
  • Hibernation
  • Scales
  • No Eyelids No External Ear Openings
  • Snakes are vertebrates

4
Sensing their Surroundings
  • Excellent eyesight
  • Sense vibrations
  • Smell with their tongue
  • Why the forked tongue?
  • Heat sensing pits

5
Poisonous or VenomousWhats the difference?
  • All venoms are poisons but not all poisons are
    venoms.
  • Venom requires a delivery mechanism.
  • Can a poisonous reptile bite and harm you?

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Ignorance Fear(Misconceptions)
  • Snakes evil reputation in western culture and
    world religious traditions.
  • Snakes will chase and purposefully try to bite
    people.
  • Legends Tall Tales.

8
Venomous vs.Non-VenomousIdentification
9
Snake IdentificationNon-Venomous
  • Small Head (similar size to body)
  • Note Applies to North America only.
  • Eastern coral snake is an exception.
  • Long Slender Body
  • Round Pupils
  • No Rattle

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Snake IdentificationVenomous
  • Large Ace of Spades shaped head
  • Neck smaller than the head.
  • Short, fat, body which tapers to a thin tail
  • Tip of the tail of juveniles is lighter colored
  • (yellowish to cream colored)
  • Vertical slit (cats-eye) shaped pupil
    (except coral snake)
  • Rattle present on rattlesnakes

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VenomousHead Profile
  • Non-Venomous
  • Head Profile

14
SnakeIdentificationBasics
15
Snake IdentificationNever say never or always -
except there is always an exception to every
rule.
  • Body Coloration Many color variations exist even
    within the same species.
  • Patterns While colors vary, most species will
    exhibit a general color pattern that does not
    dramatically differ from one individual to
    another.

16
Snake Identification
  • Bright and Contrasting Body coloration.
  • The Eastern Coral Snake displays a brightly
    contrasting color pattern consisting of red,
    yellow, and black bands down the entire length of
    the body.
  • Know Your Area In the Florida Keys, some
    Eastern Coral Snakes do not have the typical red,
    yellow, and black bands!

17
Uniform Coloration
18
Speckles
19
Stripes
20
Spots
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Cross Bands
22
Blotches
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Rings
24
Diamonds
25
WarningBehaviors
26
  • Warning Behaviors
  • Defensive body postures
  • Striking
  • Loud hissing (Florida Pine Snake)
  • Vibrating tail (rattle simulation in dry leaves)
  • True rattle

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Herping Snake Location and Interpretation
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  • The right place, right time, right weather.
  • Protect yourself
  • First Aid Snakebite Kit.
  • Leather Gloves. Chaps or high boots in thick
    vegetation.
  • Preparing your fellow herpers.
  • Wheres your snake hook?
  • Binoculars for looking from a safe distance.
  • Field Guide Measuring Tape

30
  • Props are GREAT!
  • Snake shed skin
  • Snake skull
  • Rattlesnake rattle
  • Shed rattlesnake fangs
  • Preserved snake hide

31
Endangered Species
  • Never pick up or harass in any way an endangered
    snake.
  • Educate your tour groups.
  • Many species are insular.
  • Talk about habitat.

32
Floridas ManyNon-Venomous Snakes
33
Non-venomous Snakes
  • Over 40 species of native snakes and only 6
    venomous species.
  • Snakes are everywhere, but run-ins are rare.
  • Many non-venomous snakes can fool people into
    thinking that they are venomous.

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Red rat snake
35
Florida water snake
36
Scarlet king snake
37
Black racer
38
Garter snake
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Yellow rat snake
40
Glass snake
41
Brooks king snake
42
Ring-neck snake
43
Venomous SafetyAfter the Break
44
Time to Grab a Snack
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VenomousSafety
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  • The following information has been gathered from
    books, medical journals, pamphlets, and websites.
    You will this presentation find a bibliography,
    links, and more at www.naplezoo.com/snakes. The
    resources offered serve only as a sample of
    available information and commonly suggested
    methods.
  • Those responsible for this presentation take no
    liability for their effectiveness or application.
  • These are offered for you to create a safety
    protocol that is tailored specifically to your
    needs.

48
Stay out of the STUPID ZONE!
49
Stay out of the STUPID ZONE!
50
  • Know Floridas 6 native venomous species.
  • Exotic species may be encountered.
  • Through a process of elimination snakes can be
    identified to be exotic and/or venomous. Once
    identified, the doctor will know if further
    expert resources and medications are needed to
    treat the bite. Contact local herpetologists for
    help.

51
Create A Safety Protocol
  • The most important necessity for insuring the
    highest standard of safety in case of venomous
    reptile bite is to have a safety protocol in
    place so people are informed about what to do,
    and to get to the hospital as quick as possible.
  • The first-aid done before reaching the hospital
    may save a life.

52
  • Safety Protocol Basics
  • Identify special needs depending if it is for an
    individual, family, or business.
  • Identify specific roles responsibilities for
    all persons that might be involved with emergency
    procedures.
  • Venomous reptile bites are rare, therefore, many
    physicians may not be experienced in handling
    cases of snake bite. The more YOU know the better!

53
What do YOU know?
  • Be informed regarding up-to-date basic emergency
    medical treatment procedures. Be informed of who
    the physicians are in your county or state that
    are the most informed as to how to properly treat
    venomous reptile-bite (have contact information).
    What you, as the patient, family member, or
    co-worker may know could possibly save a life.

54
What to DoIf a Bite Occurs
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  • All occurrences of snakebite should be taken
    seriously until the incident is deemed to be
    otherwise.
  • If the snake cannot be identified then it should
    be assumed that it may be venomous.
  • NOTHING should interfere with getting the victim
    to the hospital as fast as possible.
  • First aid for snake bite should be administered
    at the scene of the incident.
  • REMOVE ALL JEWELRY!

56
The following information is provided as a public
service by Steve Grenard. Grenards Medical
Herpetology was the first comprehensive survey of
the importance of amphibians and reptiles to
medicine and is also a compendium of information
on treating envenomation by snakes and lizards.
Any questions may be directed to
grenard_at_con2.com.
57
  • Allow bite to bleed freely 30 seconds.
  • Use Sawyer Extractor for 15 seconds to 1 minute
    over both fang tracks.
  • Clean and disinfect bite area thoroughly if
    possible.

58
  • Apply hard direct pressure over bite using a 4x4
    gauze pad folded in half x 2.
  • Soak gauze pad in BetadineTM solution if
    available and if victim is not allergic to
    iodine.
  • Strap gauze pad tightly in place with adhesive
    tape.

59
Sutherland Wrap(Compression Bandage)
  • Over-wrap dressing above
  • and below bite area with ACE
  • (elastic) bandage.
  • Wrap bandage as tight as one would for a sprain.
  • Not too tight.
  • Check for pulses above and below elastic wrap if
    absent it is too tight.

60
  • Immobilize bitten extremity,
  • use splinting if available.
  • If possible, keep bitten extremity below heart
    level or in a gravity dependent position.
  • Go to nearest hospital or medical facility
    immediately.
  • Try to identify the snake involved in the bite
    incident.

61
Snake BiteKits
62
  • One roll of 3" and two rolls of 6" ACE elastic
    bandages with clips for compression.
  • Sterile 4 x 4 surgical gauze pads a small bottle
    of betadine solution if not allergic to iodine.
  • One roll each of 1/2" and 1" surgical adhesive
    tape.

63
  • Two Sawyer Extractors, if you choose.
  • Rubber gloves antiseptic wipes.
  • Eye wash bottle.
  • Copy of your Snake-bite Safety Protocol.
  • Snake bite symptoms checklist.
  • Splinting materials (arm or leg).

64
Sawyer Extractor
www.sawyerproducts.com
65
  • Two Sawyer Extractors, if you choose.
  • Rubber gloves antiseptic wipes.
  • Eye wash bottle.
  • Copy of your Snake-bite Safety Protocol.
  • Snake bite symptoms checklist.
  • Splinting materials (arm or leg).

66
  • Be Prepared
  • Whether you are out in the field, keep snakes as
    a hobby, or work with them in your job, these
    essential kit items, the ability to apply them
    rapidly without panic or confusion, can buy you
    precious time and help save your life if the
    unthinkable occurs. Practice regularly.

67
RattlesnakeBites
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Six VenomousSnakes
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Floridas 6 Venomous Snakes
  • Viperids (Pit Vipers)
  • Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake
  • Dusky Pygmy Rattlesnake
  • Florida Cottonmouth Water Moccasin
  • Canebrake Rattlesnake
  • Southern Copperhead
  • Elapids (Cobras, mambas, coral snakes )
  • Eastern Coral Snake

72
Snake Dentition
  • Non-venomous No specialized teeth (fangs)
  • Aglyphic dentition
  • Venomous
  • Solenoglyphic (Front hinged movable)
  • Proteroglyphic (Front Fixed non-movable)
  • Opisthoglyphic (Rear fanged)
  • Coral snake exception

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Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake
  • Can strike up to 2/3 the length of its body.
  • Record length 8 feet.
  • Favors living in dry scrub type habitats.
  • Habitat is being heavily encroached upon.
  • Insular Species Overwinters with other
  • species in gopher tortoise burrows.

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Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake
  • Does not have to rattle before it strikes.
  • Rattle can be broken off.
  • Those snakes that dont immediately rattle are
    more likely to survive.

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Dusky Pygmy Rattlesnake
  • Because of its small stature, it is often
    mistaken for garter snakes, juvenile black racers
    and other non-venomous species.
  • Floridas two species of hognose snakes
    occasionally are also confused with the Pygmy
    Rattlesnake.

79
Dusky Pygmy Rattlesnake
  • The rattle of most pygmy rattlesnakes is
    underdeveloped and so small that it makes no
    sound.
  • Common in lowland pine flatwoods and around
    bodies of freshwater.
  • Found throughout Florida up to North Carolina and
    west to eastern Texas.

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Southern Copperhead
  • Record length 4 ½ feet
  • Often confused with juvenile cottonmouth water
    moccasins.
  • The tip of the tail of a juvenile copperhead is
    sulpher yellow in color.

82
Juvenile Cottonmouth
Adult Copperhead
83
Southern Copperhead
  • Has the largest range of all the southeastern
    species of venomous. (north to Mass., West to
    Texas and to SE Nebraska).
  • Found in Florida only along the Apalachicola
    river and its tributaries.
  • Bite is painful but not usually deadly.

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Cottonmouth Water Moccasin
  • Juvenile form has a very distinct crossbanding
    pattern (fades as they get older). This pattern
    is similar to the southern copperhead, therefore,
    these two are often mistaken for one another.
  • Gives warning by opening its mouth and
    displaying the cotton-white lining inside.

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Cottonmouth Water Moccasin
  • More frequently found in wetter areas when
    younger. Adults often found far inland away from
    any water.
  • Found throughout Florida, north to Virginia, and
    west to Illinois, Oklahoma, and Texas.

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Canebrake Rattlesnake
  • Can strike up to 2/3 the length of its body.
  • Chevron (zig-zag) shaped crossbands.
  • Reddish brown stripe down the back with tan or
    pinkish body.
  • Record length 6 feet 4 inches.

90
Canebrake Rattlesnake
  • Frequents low bottomlands and areas that tend to
    be fairly damp unlike the Eastern Diamondback
    which prefers dry areas.
  • Ranges from north Florida to southern Maine and
    west to central Texas.

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Eastern Coral Snake
  • Red, yellow, and black bands totally encircling
    the body across the belly. Red bands border next
    to the yellow bands.
  • Forget the poem and think of a traffic light.

93
Forget the Poem!
94
Eastern Coral Snake
  • Elapid snake being more closely related to
    cobras, mambas, and sea snakes.
  • Can strike, bite, and forcibly inject its venom.
  • Ranges from throughout Florida north to
    southeastern North Carolina and west to Texas and
    into northeastern Mexico.

95
Eastern Coral Snake
  • Found in a variety of habitats from dry scrub
    forest and flatwoods to wet hammocks and edges of
    swamps.
  • Behaviorally very shy and secretive. Usually
    hiding in cool damp areas like dead logs or old
    woodpiles.

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AvoidingVenomousSnakes
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Avoiding Venomous Snakes
  • Perspective Lots of snakes are out there and we
    never see them or have issues.
  • Stay aware of your surroundings.
  • Watch where you put your feet and hands.

98
Avoiding Venomous Snakes
  • Weather its affects on reptile behavior.
  • Floridas average temp. is around 72 F.
  • Reptiles are least active when outside temps are
    below 60 F and above 90 F.
  • Reptiles are most active in morning and evening
    when it is cooler.
  • When where do reptiles bask?

99
Avoiding Venomous Snakes
  • At home
  • Watch where youre going!
  • Where reptiles might be encountered.
  • Reptiles favorite basking areas.
  • Yard work gardening
  • Wear proper clothes.

100
Avoiding Venomous Snakes
  • In the Field Many professions daily bring people
    into close contact with native snakes.
  • Habitat disruption displacement of wildlife.
  • Working in wooded areas or in/near dense brush.
  • Never step over something that blocks your view
    of where you are going.
  • Wear proper clothing.

101
Questions?
102
Thank You
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