Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




FLORA AND FAUNA
Snakes alive: deadly tenants nesting in Australian suburbs
by Staff Writers
Sydney, Australia (AFP) Aug 26, 2013


Australia is renowned as being home to a startling number of the world's deadliest creatures, including a range of venomous snakes, spiders, jellyfish and octopuses that can kill a human within minutes.

They are the nightmare tenants who can live undetected alongside Australian families for years: the world's deadliest snakes.

Australia is home to some of the most venomous species including the lethal eastern brown, which thrive in urban areas where rubbish bins attract prey such as rats and mice.

Sydney snake handler Andrew Melrose says some species even spend winter months comfortably curled up inside warm roofs, until they are disturbed, often by accident.

"Some people really panic, and they are screaming," says Melrose of the residents who call him for help.

"They reckon they are going to sell up and move to a place like New Zealand where there are no snakes."

The irony is that the reptiles have often been living in the house or garden for years, and it is only something out of the ordinary -- such as a rare day off for the homeowner or a building renovation -- that brings them to light, Melrose says.

Australia is renowned as being home to a startling number of the world's deadliest creatures, including a range of venomous snakes, spiders, jellyfish and octopuses that can kill a human within minutes.

Snake deaths are rare, with only an average of one to four each year, in part because the animals shy away from humans.

"Most of the snakes, most of time we don't see them," says Ken Winkel, director of the Australian Venom Research Unit at the University of Melbourne, who agrees that many people live alongside snakes for years without knowing it.

"We are more a threat to Australian snakes than vice versa. In the life of the average Australian, it's uncommon for them to see a dangerous snake."

Most fatalities are in rural areas but deaths do occasionally occur in cities.

Winkel cites the case of the elderly woman who died after being bitten by a tiger snake while tending her passion fruit vines in Melbourne's Kew in 2003, and a 16 year-old boy who panicked and ran after being bitten by a brown snake in Sydney in 2007.

Although not as venomous as the inland taipan -- which is only found in remote areas -- the most common killer in Australia is the eastern brown snake which exceed two metres (six feet) in length and which is found across the country.

"It's a very common snake throughout the continent of Australia, combined with the fact that it is not so fussy about what it eats, says Finkel, adding that brown snakes do well in urban habitats.

Snakes usually avoid humans, but curious children present problems.

In 2012 a three-year-old boy in Townsville, Queensland, had a lucky escape when he found some eggs, placed them in a plastic container and hid them in a wardrobe. The eggs hatched deadly eastern brown snakes and he was fortunate not to be bitten. The snakes were later released into the wild.

Melrose says most of the call-outs he receives are from people claiming to have a brown snake in their house or garden, but in most cases they are not the deadly variety -- often simply brown-coloured snakes or lizards.

He says he usually recommends not disturbing the animals. "They are harmless and will probably find their way back there as they have lived there for 20 or 30 years. In a lot of areas... they do live in perfect harmony with the people."

Jim and Carolyn Bland are such a couple, having unknowingly shared their Sydney home for years with a nest of snakes which lived snugly above their heads.

"We found some snake skins out in the backyard," Jim told AFP. "But it didn't sort of twig to me that there might have been snakes living in the house or on the house."

It wasn't until they were re-tiling their roof that workers found one snake and refused to go anywhere near it. In all, three were found -- all harmless green tree snakes.

"It didn't worry us at all because we didn't know they were there," says Carolyn Bland, admitting that a very noisy possum in the roof and a diamond python snake which had once lived in a back tree had been more troubling.

"And once we found out they were non-venomous green tree snakes, well we would have quite happily left them there because they have to have somewhere to live."

.


Related Links
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FLORA AND FAUNA
Switzerland and Italy growl over 'problem bears'
Geneva, Switzerland (AFP) Aug 23, 2013
Swiss and Italian officials are butting heads over how to tackle bears roaming between the two countries, in a dispute centred on balancing human and animal welfare. "Bears don't look at borders. They don't need passports," Caterina Rosa Marino, an official with the Italian League for the Abolition of Hunting, told AFP. The northern Italian region of Trentino, which has reintroduced bear ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
New possibilities for efficient biofuel production

Microbial Who-Done-It For Biofuels

Microorganisms found in salt flats could offer new path to green hydrogen fuel

CSU researchers explore creating biofuels through photosynthesis

FLORA AND FAUNA
Computer scientists envision computer chip working like a human brain

Researchers create 'soft robotic' devices using water-based gels

Talking robot sent to ISS to 'get along' with humans

SkySweeper Robot Makes Inspecting Power Lines Simple and Inexpensive

FLORA AND FAUNA
China to Remain Wind Power Market Leader in 2020

Localized wind power blowing more near homes, farms and factories

Price of Wind Energy in the United States Is Near an All-Time Low

GDF Suez sells half-share of Portuguese renewable, thermal holdings

FLORA AND FAUNA
Top French court overrules Mercedes sales ban

Volvo gets green light for two car plants in China

Toyota joins Daimler in boycotting coolant

Birds sense speed limits on roads: study

FLORA AND FAUNA
China probes three more oil executives for 'violations'

Canada at competitive disadvantage for LNG export?

Dutch back Greenpeace ship's Arctic oil-drilling protest

Russian warship in Venezuela on friendly mission

FLORA AND FAUNA
Troubled US nuclear plant to shut down over costs

Fukushima water handling 'like whack-a-mole': minister

Japan top diplomat visits Chernobyl nuclear plant

TEPCO to drain two more tanks at Fukushima nuclear plant

FLORA AND FAUNA
Agreement reached on major new power line in northern Norway

China boosts Argentina trade, energy partnerships

NSW Government action on energy efficiency to power up industry

Russia's Lavrov: EU energy market reforms hindering closer ties

FLORA AND FAUNA
African desert plantations could help carbon capture

To protect Amazon, Colombia enlarges nature reserve

Brazil Amazon town takes a stand against deforestation

Rising deforestation sparks concern in Brazil Amazon




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement