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CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES

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Page 1: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

CHAPTER (IV)SNAKES

Page 2: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Objective:

• 1.Describe the general morphology and habit of snakes.

• 2.Distinguish the poisonous snakes with their specific poisonous chracters .

• 3. Explain the effect of venoms.

Page 3: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Snakes are limbless and usually lack both pectoral and pelvic girdles (the lateral persists as a vestige in pythons and boas.

• The numerous vertebrae of snakes, shorter and wider than those of most tetrapod , permit quick lateral undulation through grass and over rough terrain.

Page 4: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Ribs increase rigidity of the vertebral column, providing more resistance to lateral stresses.

Page 5: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 6: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Elevation of the neural spine gives the numerous muscles more leverage.

• In addition to the highly kinetic skull that enables snakes to swallow prey several times their own diameter, snakes differ from lizards in having no movable eyelids

Page 7: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• (snakes ’ eye are permanently covered with upper and lower transparent eyelids fused together) and no external ear.

Page 8: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 9: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 10: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Most snakes have relatively poor vision, but arboreal snakes posses excellent binocular vision, useful for tracking prey through branches where scent tails would be difficult to follow.

Page 11: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 12: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Snakes internal ear are mainly sensitive to sounds in a limited range of low frequency.

• However ,snakes are quite sensitive to vibration conducted through the ground.

Page 13: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey.

• In addition to the useful olfactory areas in the nose ,which are not well developed ,snakes have a pair of pit like Jacobson’s organs in the roof of the mouth.

Page 14: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 15: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• These organs are lined with an olfactory epithelium and are richly innervated.

Page 16: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 17: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• The forked tongue, flicked through the air picks up scent molecules; the tongue is than drawn past Jacobson’son organ.

Page 18: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 19: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Information is transmitted from Jacoson’s organ to the brain, where scents are identified.

Page 20: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Most snakes capture their prey by grabbing it with their mouth and swallowing it when it is alive.

Page 21: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Swallowing struggling, kicking, biting animal is dangerous, so most snakes that swallow prey alive specialize on small prey, such as worm, insects, fish, frogs, and less frequently, small mammals.

Page 22: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Snakes that first kill their prey by constriction often specialize on larger, often mammalian, prey.

Page 23: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• The largest constrictors are able to kill and swallow prey as larger as deer, leopards, and crocodilians.

Page 24: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• However, the muscle rearrangement that permit constricting reduce the speed at which constrictors can travel.

• As a result, most constrictors tend to ambush prey.

Page 25: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Other snakes kill their prey before swallowing by injecting it with venom.

• Venomous snakes are usually divided into five families, based in part on type of fangs.

Page 26: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Family; Viperidae

• Vipers have large, movable, tubular fangs at the front of their mouth.

• This family includes American pit viper, and Old World true vipers, which lack facial heat-sensing pits.

Page 27: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Viper

Page 28: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Family -Elapidae

• Venomous snakes have short, permanently erect fangs in the front of the mouth.

• Includes cobra, mambas, coral snakes, and kraits.

Page 29: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

KraitCobra

Coral snake

Page 30: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Family; Hydrophiidae

• Small groups include the highly venomous sea snake.

Page 31: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Family; Atractaspididae

• The poorly known fossorial mole vipers.

Page 32: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Family; Colubridae

• Which contains most familier (and non venomous)snakes, does include a few venomous species, including the rear-fanged African boom slang and the twig snake, both of which are responsible for some human fatalities.

Page 33: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

African boom slang Twig snake

Page 34: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Subfamily; CrotalinaeFamily ; Viperidae

• are called pit viper because they posses special heat pit organ on their heads, located between their nostrils and eyes.

Page 35: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 36: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• All of the best known North American venomous snakes are pit vipers,

• such as rattlesnakes, water moccasins and copperheads

Page 37: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• The pits are supplied with a dense packing of free nerve ending from the fifth cranial nerve.

• They are exceedingly sensitive to radiant energy (long- wave infrared ) and

• can distinguish temperature differences smaller than 0.003 C from a radiating surface.

Page 38: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Pit vipers use their pits to track worm-blooded prey and to aim strikes,

• which they can make as effectively in total darkness as in daylight.

Page 39: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Reproduction in snakes

• Oviparous

• Ovoviviparous

• Viviparous

Page 40: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Oviparous

• Most snakes are oviparous species that lay their shelled, elliptical eggs beneath rotten logs, under rocks, or in holes dug the ground.

Page 41: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 42: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Ovoviviparous

• Including all American pit vipers( except the tropical bushmaster)

• giving birth to well formed young.

Page 43: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Viviparous

• very few snakes

• a primitive placenta forms

• permitting the exchange of materials between the embryonic and maternal bloodstreams.

Page 44: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 45: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Characters of Poisonous snakes

1. Sea snake Hydrophis

2. Viper Vipera russelli3. Green snake Trimerisurus4. Cobra Naja naja

King cobra Naja hannah5. Krait Bungarus fasciatus6. Coral snake Callophis macclellandi

Page 46: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Page 47: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

NON-POISONOUS AND POISONOUS SNAKES

Cylindrical tail flat tail

LAND SNAKES POISONOUS SEA SNAKES

Full belly scalesPOISONOUS OR NON-POISONOUS

small belly scalesNON-POISONOUS

narrow belly scales

NON-POISONOUS

Page 48: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Supra-occipital

shield

POISONOUS ORNON-POISONOUS

POISONOUS

Pit viper

POISONOUS

Viper

POISONOUSPOISONOUSPOISONOUSKraitCobra

Third supra-

labial scaleNostril

Eye

VertebralsMental groove

Fourth infra-labial scales

KEY FOR IDENTIFYING POISONOUS AND NON- POISONOUS SNAKES

Page 49: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Venom Neurotoxic

1. Sea snakes Hydrophis2. Cobra Naja naja

King cobra Naja hannah3. Krait Bungarus fasciatus4. Coral snake Collaphis macclellandi

Page 50: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Venom haemorrhaegic

1. Viper Vipera russelli2. Green snake Trimerisurus

Page 51: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Sea snake Hydrophis

2. Head small

1. Marine3.Tail flat and

compress

Page 52: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

2. Head small

Page 53: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

3. Tail flat and compressed.

Page 54: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Sea snake Hydrophis

4. Yellow, grey or blue with dark

cross bands

Page 55: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

5. Belly scales small and pale coloured.

Page 56: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• 6. Venom neurotoxic and cause paralysis and renal failure.

Page 57: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Sea snake Hydrophis

Page 58: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Sea snake Hydrophis

Page 59: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Viper Vipera russelli

1. Terrestrial

2. May grow to 5 feet.

Page 60: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

3. Head is triangular like an arrow head.

6. Small scales on head.

Page 61: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

5. Body has 3 chains of brown patches.

4. Tail is round and short.

Page 62: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

7.Mental groove present

8. Belly scales full and white with black specks

Page 63: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

9. Sensory pit absent.

10. Venom haemorrhaegic

Page 64: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Green snake Trimerisurus , Pit viper

1. Terrestrial

Page 65: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

2.Tail round, slender and brown at the tip.

Page 66: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

3.Body colour green with a white lineon either side.

Page 67: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

4. Ventral scales full and yellowish in colour.

Page 68: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• 5.Mental groove present.

• 6.Small scales on the head.

• 7.Heat sensitive pit present between nostril and eye.

• 8.Venom haemorrhagic.

Page 69: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

5

6

7

Page 70: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Cobra Naja naja , King Cobra Naja hannah

Page 71: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

2. Tail cylindrical

1.Terrestrial

Page 72: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

3. Shield on the head

Page 73: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

4. Belly scales full.

Page 74: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

5. Mental groove present.

Page 75: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

6. Vertebrals not enlarged.

Page 76: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

7. Third supra-labial shield touches the eye and nose shields.

123third supra-labial scale

eyenostril

Page 77: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

8. Neck with hood and markings.

Page 78: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Occipital scales absent – cobra N. naja

Occipital scales present – king cobra N. hannah

Page 79: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Shield scales

Occipital

scales

10.Venom neurotoxic

Page 80: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

1 2

3 4

5 6 7

8 9

10 11

ocales

Head (dorsal)

Occipital scales

Shield scales

Page 81: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Krait Bungarus fasciatus

1. Terrestrial

Page 82: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

2. Tail cylindrical and blunt at the tip.

Page 83: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

3. Body is triangular with bands andhalf-rings across the back.

Page 84: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

4. Belly scales full

Page 85: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

6. Shields on the head

Page 86: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

7. Vertebral scales large and hexagonal

Page 87: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

fourth infra-labial scales

9.Venom neurotoxic

8.Fourth infra-labial scale is largest

Page 88: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 89: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 90: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 91: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 92: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 93: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Coral snake Callophis macclellandi

1. Tail round

2.Terrestrial

Page 94: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

3. Ventrals broad.

Page 95: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

4. Mental groove present.

Page 96: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

5. Shields on the head

Page 97: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

6. Third supra-labial shield touches the eye and nose shields.

123third supra-labial scale

eyenostril

Page 98: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

7. Neck without hood.

Page 99: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

8. Coral spots on the belly

9. Venom neurotoxic

Page 100: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

GOOD LUCK

Page 101: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Snake Venoms and

their Symptoms

Page 102: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• Poisonous snake have two grooved or tubular fangs or poison teeth communicating by means of a duct to modified salivary glands situated below and behind the eyes.

Page 103: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 104: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 105: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 106: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 107: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

These glands contains- secrete venom- Which contains several enzymes-that destroy the tissues of man and animals.

Page 108: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Mouth parts of snake

Page 109: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 110: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

SALIVARY GLANDS

VENOM

(8 TO 9 ENZYMES)

Destroy the Man & Animals

Page 111: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

- half of them destroy proteins- other half destroy fat base compounds.

Page 112: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Snake venom

Haemorrhagic Neurotoxic

Page 113: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Haemorrhagic venom

- Larger proportion of protein destroying- enzymes- Vipers and Pit vipers- Destroy protein structure

(muscles, connective tissues & blood vessels)

- Due to the damage blood vessels, blood is oozing out at the site of the bite and within the tissue around the vessel.

Page 114: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Neurotoxic venom

- Larger proportion of enzymes - destroy fat base tissue- Cobra, king cobra, krait and coral snake- They break down the fatty myelin of nerves

and destroy the nervous tissues.

Page 115: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas
Page 116: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

General symptoms of Snakebite

Vision

- Blurriness

Heart and vessels-Rapid pulse-low blood pressure- severe shock

Muscular-convulsions-loss of coordination-weakness

Gastric-Nausea -Vomiting

Intestinal-Diarrhea

Other skin sites

-Bleeding spots-Numbness-Tingling-Sweating

Wound site-Bleeding-Fang marks-Discoloration-Burning sensation-Swelling

Respiratory-Breathing difficulty

Systemic-Fever-Severe pain

Central-Dizziness-Fainting-Increasing thirst-Headache

Page 117: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Cytolysis of red blood cells

Cytolysis of red blood cells

Page 118: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Symptoms of the haemorrhagic venomof vipers and pit vipers

1. Intense burning pain at the site of bite.2. Bleeding from the fang wounds.3. Black bruises at the site of bite due to

cytolysis of red blood cells. 4. Marked swelling at the site of bite due to

accumulation of fluids. 5. The pulse is small and thready and the

blood pressure is low. 6. Collapse with pupils dilated and insensitive

to light.

Page 119: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

7. Spontaneous and submucous

haemorrhages are common.

8. Death as a rule is due to circulatory

failure.

Page 120: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

Symptoms of neurotoxic venom of cobra and krait

• 1.Pain at the site of bite which radiated along the limb.

• 2.Drowsiness, nausea, and vomiting.

• 3. Numbness and weakness of muscles followed by partial paralysis.

• 4.Speech is blurred at this stage.

• Symptoms resembles those of drunkenness.

Page 121: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

• 5.Followed by dropping of eyelids, dribbling of saliva and difficulty in swallowing.

• 6. Dropping of the head due to paralysis of the neck muscle.

• 7.Collapse with difficulty in breathing and cyanosis.

• 8. Krait poisoning is characterized by intense pain in the abdomen due to intestinal haemorrhage in addition to the above symptoms.

Page 122: CHAPTER (IV) SNAKES · •Nevertheless, most snakes employ chemical senses rather than vision or vibration detection to hunt their prey. •In addition to the useful olfactory areas

GOOD LUCK