The Australian Reptile Park could soon be home to a few new kings if all things go to plan.
One of the park’s prized King Cobras laid 34 eggs earlier this week, with staff removing the eggs to incubate them.
Curator Liz Vella said this was the biggest clutch staff have ever collected from the snake.
“This snake has bred three times before and 32 of her eggs were viable so they’ll incubate for the next 50 or so days and in that time we’ll work out how many of the snakes we’d like to keep,’’ Ms Vella said.
“We take the eggs because we have a better rate of success with hatchling if we incubate them rather than leave them with the reptile.’‘
King Cobras are the world’s largest venomous snake and so are one of the most feared, one of the reasons why the Reptile Park is eager to keep a few younger ones around.
“I think the King Cobras really have an impact as an educational animal as they are one of the most feared because people don’t know a lot about them other than they’re venomous so we try to break down that fear through education,’’ Ms Vella said.
Category Archives: Snakes
15 displaced in apartment fire; snakes rescued
Fifteen residents were displaced after a Tuesday morning apartment fire.
First responders were called to Gulf Villa Apartments, located in the 1200 block of College Parkway, at 10:45 a.m., said Chief Jonathan Kanzigg with Midway Fire District.
Kanzigg said responders arrived at the fire within 30 seconds of the call.
The fire station is 200 feet from the complex,” Kanzigg said. “When I got there, there was moderate smoke coming from the second floor and 10 minutes later it became heavy smoke.”
The fire at the two-story complex marks the second candle to be extinguished on Santa Rosa County’s fire safety tree, which is part of the “Keep Your Holidays Bright” campaign.
Two residents had to be woken up by firefighters and were medically evaluated on the scene and released, Kanzigg said.
Other residents, 10 adults and five children, also lost their homes, and the American Red Cross provided assistance. Two units of the eight-unit building had extensive fire and water damage, two units had extensive water damage and four units had moderate smoke damage.
Three of the units were not occupied.
Kanzigg added that first responders also rescued two large snakes from a complex that had escaped from their glass cage. The pet reptiles’ names are not known.
Gulf Breeze, Holley-Navarre, Avalon, Bagdad, Florosa Fire, Pensacola Beach, Brent and Navarre Beach fire departments also responded.
The fire was extinguished by 11:35 a.m.
Kanzigg said he believes the fire was started in a heating unit, but the State Fire Marshal is investigating the blaze.
Nicole Kidman wants a pet snake
Actress Nicole Kidman who raises alpacas on her farm in Nashville has revealed she would love to extend her exotic pet collection to include snakes.
‘I want to get some more weird animals eventually, I’d love to get snakes, I love them. They might not be a good idea around the baby though,’ contactmusic.com quoted her as saying.
Australian-born Nicole admitted she is fascinated by unusual pets and loves the llama-like alpacas because they are ‘so pretty’.
‘We have alpacas on our farm because they’re so pretty. They have lovely long lashes. I think they’re really cool. I always wanted a mix of weird animals but that’s the weirdest we have.’
Transplant Snakes Road-Tripping To New York
Clearly hearing stories of the big-time from his pals in the Bronx toilet system, one Florida Corn Snake decided it was time for him to take his shot at fame in the big city. A Queens man found a 2½-foot-long Corn Snake hiding in his car’s engine yesterday morning. His car had just been shipped up from Florida, where the snakes are common (here they’re kept mainly as pets). But now that Old St. Patrick’s has even more papal power, the city can get in on all that snake-banning business.
Turcot work means snakes will have to move
MONTREAL – The 106 residents facing eviction to make way for the new Turcot Interchange aren’t the only ones losing their homes to the $3-billion project.
Quebec’s Transport Department must also find new homes for a shy species of snakes that lives in the former Turcot yards.
“Turcot is an ideal place for these snakes. There are a lot of rocks where they can hide and it has a good southern exposure,” said Patrick Galois, a biologist and consultant with Amphibia-Nature, a research group specializing in amphibians and reptiles.
Galois’s team of researchers found 43 Dekay’s brown snakes on the site during a 2007 inventory for the city.
Under environmental laws, the snakes must be moved to a safer location before the seven-year construction project planned for 2011-2018 can begin.
“We are just at the beginning of the process. If this is a condition, then this will have to be done before we start,” said Guillaume Lavoie, a public affairs consultant for Transport Quebec.
Lavoie did not know how much it will cost to move the snakes. However, wildlife specialists were skeptical of an article in Saturday’s La Presse claiming the job will cost millions.
The price will more likely be in the neighbourhood of $50,000 or possibly $100,000 at the outside, said Patrick Asch, director of Heritage Laurentien, an environmental group that has restored waterfront areas in southwestern Montreal.
The Montreal archipelago is the only part of Quebec where brown snakes are found, Galois said. The population on the Island of Montreal probably numbers in the hundreds, which are increasingly confined to isolated patches, he said.
The timid species, with brown spots and a tan stripe, grow to 23 to 33 centimetres (about a foot). They slither under rocks that absorb warmth from the sun and hibernate by burrowing under the frost line. They feed on snails, earthworms and slugs and are often found on vacant industrial land where they shelter under debris. Their main predators are raccoons, red foxes, cats and birds of prey.
Provincial conservation laws require that the snakes be protected as a species that could potentially become endangered or vulnerable.
As vacant land is developed, the number of sites where the snakes can survive is being drastically reduced, Galois said. “We are facing a major loss of habitat.”
Without protective measures, the species could disappear from the island by the end of the century, he predicted.
Galois said the best option is to capture the snakes and move them nearby to the St. Jacques escarpment, which will be preserved as parkland.
Brown snakes, found throughout much of eastern North America, are one of three surviving species of snakes on the Island of Montreal, Galois said.
Forest-dwelling ring-necked snakes are found on Mount Royal, while garter snakes are common across the province.
“It’s important to preserve biodiversity,” Galois said. “Unfortunately, these snakes often live in sectors that are prized by humans for development.”
Hartford Hospital Doing Research With Snakes And Volunteers
For most of her life, Joan Lewis was terrified of snakes.
But that was a few weeks ago, before staring at photos of snakes while lying in an MRI machine during a psychotherapy session that ended with her holding a snake, and taking a drug (or a placebo; she doesn’t know which) traditionally used to treat tuberculosis. Now the 63-year-old Newington resident can take her hobby of metal-detecting into the woods for the first time.
It was all part of an ongoing study at Hartford Hospital designed to get a better sense of how fears develop in the brain, and how the brain banishes those fears. The research team also hopes to get a better sense of how the drug d-cycloserine works on the brain.
D-cycloserine has been used to treat tuberculosis for decades but only for the past 10 years or so have researchers known of its effectiveness in conquering phobias.
It affects the part of the brain called the amygdala, which develops new fears and banishes old ones. Specifically, it makes the amygdala more receptive to neurotransmitters so that lessons from psychotherapy are absorbed faster and more deeply.
Exactly how it works, though, is still a mystery. That’s what researchers Andrea Nave, David Tolin, and Michael Stevens hope to find out.
“How does the brain banish the fear? We don’t really know that,” says Stevens, director of the Institute of Living‘s clinical neuroscience and development laboratory. “It’s the first time anyone has ever approached it with this level of thoughtfulness — what’s working, and why is it working?”
That’s where Lewis comes in. She’s one of six people who have signed up for the study. Besides Lewis, two have completed it and the others are partway through. The study began about two months ago. Altogether, 20 subjects are needed for the study, which is expected to be completed by next spring. Half will take the medication and the other half will take placebos. They receive $50 stipends, but Lewis said the real incentive was the chance to conquer her lifelong fear of snakes.
Besides the initial meeting to determine the subject’s eligibility, the study is done in three parts. First, subjects lie in an MRI for about 40 minutes while they look at snakes. That gives researchers a sense of how their brain reacts to snakes. The second meeting is a psychotherapy session in which subjects sit in a room with a real snake. Ideally, it ends with the subject holding the snake.
For Lewis, it took 90 minutes to get to that point. Much of that session was terrifying, Lewis said. She started at first as far away from the snake as possible, slowly being coaxed closer to it. Eventually, she held Princess, a 3-year-old corn snake kept in an aquarium at the Institute of Living.
“I wouldn’t say I love all snakes now,” she said, “but I actually felt motherly when I held it.”
The last part of the study is another session in the MRI, identical to the first. That way, the researchers can compare the snake-fearing brain to the snake-friendly brain.
So why snakes? Nave, a clinical research assistant who led the study, said it’s one of the easiest of all the phobias to expose subjects to in an MRI. Tolin, director of the anxiety disorders center, added that he hates spiders.
Because it’s so early in the study, the researchers don’t know how much of a role d-cycloserine played in Lewis’ new phobia-free status. They expect to finish the study, and use the results to apply to the National Institutes of Health for a grant to conduct a large-scale study on the drug’s effects on phobias.
Men fined for having reptiles
A NEW South Wales man has been fined $2000 and ordered to pay $9735 in court costs after being convicted of illegally possessing 29 native reptiles.
Neil Andrew Simpson (46) was apprehended at Perth Airport in April last year after officers from the Department of Environment and Conservation (DEC) intercepted the illegal consignment of reptiles which had been flown to Perth from Newman and were scheduled to be put on a flight to Sydney.
The consignment included a death adder, geckos of various species, dragon lizards, a blue-tongue lizard and pythons.
All the reptiles had been concealed in plastic containers.
There was also a second conviction in the Perth Magistrates Court, when a Nollamara man (33) was fined a total of $600 and ordered to pay $110 in court costs for illegally keeping a 2m south-west carpet python at his home.
Rikki James Piromalli pleaded guilty to possessing and keeping the carpet python in captivity without authority.
The snake is a specially protected species in WA.
Anyone who has information about the illegal removal of reptiles or notices any suspicious activity suggesting that reptiles are being illegally moved, should call DEC’s Wildcare hotline 9474 9055.