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10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by andyblinks05: 12:49am On Oct 13, 2022
Check out the 10 most dangerous snake in the world. Some of them are found in Africa.




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KCtnlw-W98I


Ten

Africas deadliest snake, the black mamba (Dendroaspis polylepis) can kill a person with just two drops of venom, Live Science reported. Named for the dark, inky color inside of their mouths, black mambas are actually brownish in color. They average around 8 feet (2.5 meters) in length, and can move at 12 mph (19 km/h).

Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by andyblinks05: 12:51am On Oct 13, 2022
Nine

A bite from a fer-de-lance (Bothrops asper) can turn a person's body tissue black as it begins to die, according to a 1984 paper published in the journal Toxicon (opens in new tab). These pit vipers, which live in Central and South America and are between 3.9 and 8.2 feet (1.2 and 2.5 m) long and weigh up to 13 pounds (6 kg), are responsible for about half of all snakebite venom poisonings in Central America, according to a 2001 study published in the journal Toxicon. Because fer-de-lance venom contains an anticoagulant (a substance that hinders blood clotting), a bite from this snake can cause a person to hemorrhage.

Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by andyblinks05: 12:51am On Oct 13, 2022
Eight

About 24 hours after being bitten on the thumb by a juvenile boomslang (also called a South African green tree snake), herpetologist Karl Patterson Schmidt died from internal bleeding from his eyes, lungs, kidneys, heart and brain, researchers reported in 2017 in the journal Biochimica et Biophysica Acta. The snake had been sent to Schmidt at The Field Museum in Chicago for identification. Like others in the field at the time (1890), Schmidt believed that rear-fanged snakes like the boomslang (Dispholidus typus) couldn't produce a venom dose big enough to be fatal to humans. the tiniest of cuts. Blood will also start passing through the body via the victim's stools, urine, saliva, and vomit until they die." Luckily, there is antivenom for the boomslang if a victim can get it in time.

Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by andyblinks05: 12:52am On Oct 13, 2022
Seven

Native to the mountains and grasslands of southeast Australia, the eastern tiger snake (Notechis scutatus) is named for the yellow and black bands on its body, though not all populations sport that pattern, according to the Australian Museum. Its potent venom can cause poisoning in humans in just 15 minutes after a bite and is responsible for at least one death a year on average, the University of Adelaide reported.

Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by andyblinks05: 12:52am On Oct 13, 2022
Six

Around 58,000 deaths in India are attributed to snake bites every year, and the Russell's viper (Daboia russelii) is responsible for the majority of these mortalities, according to research published March 25, 2021, in the journal PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases (opens in new tab). This species is considered one of the most deadly of the true vipers, researchers reported in 2021 in the journal Toxins (opens in new tab).

Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by andyblinks05: 12:53am On Oct 13, 2022
Five

The saw-scaled viper (Echis carinatus) is the smallest member of the "Big Four" in India — along with Russell's viper, the common krait (Bungarus caeruleus) and the Indian cobra (Naja naja) — thought to be responsible for the most bites and related deaths in the country.

Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by andyblinks05: 12:54am On Oct 13, 2022
Four

The banded krait (Bungarus fasciatus) is a slow mover during the day and is much more likely to bite after dark. The snake's venom can paralyze muscles and prevent the diaphragm from moving, according to a 2016 study published in the journal PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases (opens in new tab). This stops air from entering the lungs, effectively resulting in suffocation.

Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by Freestainworld(m): 1:20am On Oct 13, 2022
See correct poisoning agents, fear snake anytime any day.
Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by andyblinks05: 1:39am On Oct 13, 2022
Three

The king cobra (Ophiophagus hannah) is the world's longest venomous snake, measuring up to 18 feet (5.4 m), according to the Natural History Museum (opens in new tab) in London. The snake's impressive eyesight allows it to spot a moving person from nearly 330 feet (100 m) away, according to the Smithsonian Institution (opens in new tab). When threatened, a king cobra will use special ribs and muscles in its neck to flare out its "hood" or the skin around its head; these snakes can also lift their heads off the ground about a third of their body length, according to the San Diego Zoo (opens in new tab). 

Its claim to fame is not so much the potency of its venom, but rather the amount injected into victims: Each bite delivers about 7 milliliters (about 0.24 fluid ounces) of venom, and the snake tends to attack with three or four bites in quick succession, the Fresno Zoo reported (opens in new tab). Even a single bite can kill a human in 15 minutes and an adult elephant in just a few hours, Sean Carroll, molecular biologist at the University of Maryland, wrote in The New York Times (opens in new tab).

Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by fman(m): 1:40am On Oct 13, 2022
3
Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by andyblinks05: 1:40am On Oct 13, 2022
Two.

You could be bitten multiple times before becoming aware of the coastal taipan (Oxyuranus scutellatus), thanks to its incredible speed, according to the Australian Museum (opens in new tab). When threatened, this snake, which lives in the wet forests of temperate and tropical coastal regions, will lift its whole body off the ground as it jumps fangs-first with extraordinary precision and injects venom into its enemy. Before 1956, when an effective antivenom was produced, this snake's bite was nearly always fatal, according to Australian Geographic (opens in new tab).

Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by andyblinks05: 1:41am On Oct 13, 2022
One.

The inland taipan is one of the most venomous snakes, according to the International Journal of Neuropharmacology (opens in new tab), meaning just a teensy bit of its venom can kill prey (or human victims). They live tucked away in the clay crevices of Queensland and South Australia's floodplains, often within the pre-dug burrows of other animals. Living in more remote locations than the coastal taipan, the inland taipan rarely comes into contact with humans, the Australian Museum (opens in new tab) reported. When the taipan does feel threatened, the snake coils its body into a tight S-shape before darting out in one quick bite or multiple bites. A main ingredient of this venom, which sets it apart from other species, is the hyaluronidase enzyme. According to a 2020 issue of Toxins journal (Novel Strategies for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Snakebites (opens in new tab)), this enzyme increases the absorption rate of the toxins throughout the victim's body.

Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by matrix199(m): 3:32am On Oct 13, 2022
Snakes didn't design themselves. Nature did! If you have to hate snakes, hate the creator first.
Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by TINUBUISMAD: 3:33am On Oct 13, 2022
angry
Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by johnorian: 5:23am On Oct 13, 2022
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Re: 10 World Most Dangerous Snakes by joaquinuzziel: 5:39am On Oct 13, 2022

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