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SNAKES Essay Research Paper

SNAKES Essay, Research Paper


Have you ever wondered exactly what a snake is?


Snakes are elongated, limbless reptiles that have often appeared in


art and mythology. Scientists have currently discovered an estimated


2,500-3,000 living species of snakes living throughout the world except in


the arctic regions. There is one exception to the old world viper, which has


been found as far north as Scandinavia (60? North Latitude).


The size variation of snakes ranges from slender blind snakes


(family Leptotyphlopidae) which reaches a maximum length of 13cm


(5 in.), to the largest snake on record, the Asiatic reticulated python,


which attained a record length of 10m (33 ft).


Have you ever asked anyone what the phyical characteristics of a


snake is? To answer your question: Snakes lack limbs, a sternum (breast


bone), shoulder girdle, exterior ear openings, and urinary bladder, and


most snakes (but not all) lack a pelvic girdle.


There are two types of snakes: constrictors and poisonous.


Constrictors will either stalk their prey or lay very still until Its prey come


near it. It will then strike forward and wrap around the prey crushing it and


cutting off all air supply. The initial strike takes less than one-half second.


It will then swallow the prey animal head first because the hair of animals


folds backwards and makes it easier to swallow.


Poisonous snakes inject a very potent venom into their prey


Keith 2through fangs. There are three different class of venomous snakes:


Opisthoglyphus (rear fanged), Proteroglyph (front fanged, with holes


pointing outward for “spraying”) and Solenoglyph (front fanged and


carved). The most common of these three are Solenoglyphs, which have


fangs that can be folded along the roof of the mouth.


All snakes have powerful digestive enzymes to breakdown the


hair, bones, and other parts of their preys’ body. As part of the digestive


system the salivary glands also produce powerful enzymes. If saliva


containing these enzymes enters the wounds of a prey animal, it not only


starts the digestive process, but also may cause such serous tissue damage


that the prey dies.


The destructive substances in a snakes venom include neurotoxins


and hemotoxins. Neurotoxins paralyze the central nervous system and


cause heart and respiratory failure; hemotoxins destroy blood vessels and


blood cells and cause internal hemorragins. The different substances are


not uniformly present in all snake venom, but vary with the species and


the individual snakes within a species. Venom retains digestive powers;


injected into a prey animal it may shorten the usual days-long digestive


process of a snake by more than half.


Less than one-third of the 2,500-3,000 living species of snakes are


classified as venomous, and less than 300 species are fatal to humans. In


the United States, more than twice as many people are killed by bees,


wasps, and scorpion stings as by snake bites.


Keith 3There are four basic kinds of snake movement: Lateral (horizontal)


undulation, conceltina movement sidewinding and rectilinear. Lateral


undulating, also called serpentine movement is the most common form


and is used by all snakes. By alternately contracting and relaxing muscles


down each side of the body, the snake forms itself into a number of


rearward-moving horizontal waves. While doing so, the snake maneuvers


its body so that the rear of each backward moving wave pushes against


something resistant.


In concertania movement, also called earthworm movement, the


snake anchors the forepart of its body and pulls the rest of its body behind


it in the form of hoizontal curves; it then extends out the forepart of its


body, anchors it, and repeats the process.


Sidewinding is employed on soft sand or other surfaces that offer


no resistance or slip. In sidewinding the snake loops its body into an


S-shape, with only two points of its body coming in contact with the


surface of the ground. It then progressively shifts the two contact points


back along the body consequently propelling its body forward.


Rectilinear, or caterpillar, movement involves a sliding of the skin


back and forth over the body musculature and is therefor possible only in


those kinds of snakes, such as rattlesnakes and boas, which do not have


the skin tightly attached to the underlying musculature. The ribs remain


essentially motionless, and the scales only provide body-to-ground


friction.


Keith 4 The vast majority of snakes lay eggs, but in some, the eggs are


retained in the female until hatched, and the young are born live.


Pythons have laid over 100 eggs in a single clutch, and some live bearing


snakes are remarkably prolific. The number of eggs or young is dependant


on the species and how large or small the mother is. No true parental care


of young is known, bu

t a few snakes brood their eggs until they hatch.


Gestation and incubation periods vary according to the species and


temperature. Young snakes escape the eggs by splitting the shell with a


special structure, the egg tooth, which falls off soon after. The life span of


a snake is dependant on the species.APPENDIX 1


COMMON BELIEFS ABOUT SNAKES


1.Snakes are not slimy. They feel more like shoe leather.


2.Snakes are not mean. Most snakes are shy, timid animals.


3.Snakes do not chase people


4.Snakes do not stalk humans.


5.Snakes are not fast. The fastest snake, the Coachwhip, can go about as


fast as the average person can run (7 m.p.h.)


APPENDIX 2


Modern Myths


Size. Snakes are almost always described as larger than they really are.


Stories about New England water snakes eight and ten feet long are simply


not true. Northern water snakes rarely exceed three and a half feet in


length, with the largest stretching only four and a half feet. While the


black rat snake, U.S.A’s largest native snake, can reach lengths of just over


eight feet, most New England snakes are less than three feet long.


Poisonous Snakes. The regularity with which people kill a snake first and


ask questions later might lead you to believe that the world is overrun with


poisonous snakes. In fact, venomous snakes only make up about one-third


of the 2,500-3,000 snake species worldwide, and in Massachusetts only


two of the state’s fourteen species of snakes are poisonous (timber


rattlesnake and northern copperhead). Both are rare, reclusive and


generally confined to isolated areas.


Folk Tales. Folk tales about snakes are handed down from generation to


generation and include such things as snakes that charm prey, swallow


their young for protection, poison people with their breath, roll like hoops,


and suck milk from cows. These folk tales could be just interesting and


amusing stories except that many people still believe them. As we learn


more about the true nature of snakes, we can begin to base our perceptions


of them on fact rather than fiction.


Hoop Snakes


APPENDIX 2 CONT.


Myth: When frightened, hoop snakes will bite their tails and roll downhill


like a wagon wheel.


Reality: Anatomically, snakes are not well equipped for rolling and there


are no reliable accounts of this ever occurring. The hoop snake myth may


have been associated originally with mud snakes found in the southern


United States. Mud snakes will occasionally lie in a loose coil shaped like


a hoop, but they slither away from danger like other snakes.


Swallowing Young


Myth: When confronted with danger, mother snakes swallow their young,


spitting them out later once danger has passed.


Reality: Parental care is not very well developed in snakes and there is no


evidence that mother snakes protect their young in this way. The myth


may result from the fact that some snakes eat young snakes of their own


species or of other species, though usually not their own brood.


Charming Snakes


Myth: Snakes have the ability to charm prey, especially birds, so they


cannot flee.


Reality: There is no evidence that snakes charm their prey. Small animals


may become “frozen with fear” when confronted by snakes but they are


not charmed. Birds may flutter about in front of a snake in an attempt to


lure it away from their nests; occasionally a bird may actually be captured


by the snake, giving the impression that it was charmed. The fact thatAPPENDIX 2 CONT.


snakes never blink may also have played a role in this myth’s origin.


Sucking Milk


Myth: Milk snakes are so named because of their ability to suck milk


directly from the udders of cows.


Reality: Although milk snakes are common around barns that house cows,


they completely lack the anatomy necessary to suck milk (or anything else


for that matter). Barns are attractive to milk snakes because they provide


abundant food in the form of small rats and mice.


Poisonous Breath


Myth: Puff adders (hognose snakes) mix poison with their breath and can


kill a person at a distance of twenty-five feet.


Reality: Although the bite of a hognose snake can produce swelling and a


burning sensation, these snakes rarely bite people and are not considered


poisonous. When confronted, they do puff themselves up and hiss, but


their breath is harmless.


Cottonmouths in New England


Myth: Swimmers in New England are advised to watch out for poisonous


cottonmouths, also known as water moccasins.


Reality: Simply put, there are no water moccasins in New England. The


cottonmouth, or water moccasin, is a poisonous snake of the southeastern


United States that occurs no farther north than the Great Dismal Swamp of


Virginia. Many people mistake nonpoisonous water snakes for water moccasins.

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