iHerp Australia Issue 12 | Page 3

The ‘Wrangler’ Writes... Welcome to another issue of Australia’s premier online reptile resource! This is the first time we have had an issue with a special (loose) theme - venom! It’s an extremely broad subject, and we have an amazingly diverse range of great content. First, we are proud to feature an article on sea kraits by a doyen of Australian herpetology, Hal Cogger. Hal has worked on this group of reptiles for many years, and provides a fascinating insight into the relationships involved. We also have an update on King Cobra research at Agumbe in South India, including a personal perspective from Adam Sapiano, who travelled to India earlier this year. Legendary Melbourne herper Ron Waters has compiled a comprehensive piece on feeding neonate elapids, and Neville Burns and Michael Cermak recount their personal experiences with two of our most feared and respected venomous snakes, the Eastern Brown Snake and the Coastal Taipan respectively. Plus our US correspondent Vickie Lillo made a special trip to one of only five institutions in the world to display the critically- endangered Guatemalan Beaded Lizard. Although estimated to number as few as 200 individuals in the wild, Vickie reports that a raft of conservation initiatives in its endemic range are making a real difference for this exceedingly rare reptile. We also take a look at the folklore surrounding its cousin, the Gila Monster, and the amazing pharmacological potential of its venom. Last but not least, Kit Prendergast examines what have been dubbed the ‘most poisonous animals on earth’ – poison dart frogs. Not only are they incredibly beautiful, but they also have unusual life histories and have become very popular with hobbyists in captivity. We reckon there is something for everyone in this special issue, and hope you enjoy it. Don’t forget to support our advertising partners, because they are all great businesses, and by doing so, you are also supporting us. Happy Herping! John McGrath and fellow exhibitor, Bob Withey. Bob had warned Taken overall, Eastern Brown Snake me that this was the most dangerous brown to the most commonly-encountered ma handle that he had ever encountered. As he is snakes in New South Wales, and ar extremely experienced, such a statement was not to much of the east coast. They are eff d l e i f f o h t l a e w a d e n i b m o c s a h r e g g o C l a H , y g o l o t e p r e h n a i l a r t s u A f o n e y o d be taken lightly. It said a lot that Bob claimed the but e h t f o s e u s s i n e v e s g n i d u l c n i , s n o i t a c i l lers b u p f of o e rodent u g o l a t a c populations, e v i s n e t x e n a h t i w this h c r a a e snake could not be tailed t s e r without e t n i r a l u c the i t r a p handler a d l e h g being n o l s a h e H . diet a i l a r t may s u A f o see s n a them i b i h p m approach A d n a s e l i t p human e R s u o . . . . s n o i t with a c o l l a a c hook; i p o r t c i l l y d i n i y l than l a i c e p s some e – s e k other a n s a e species. s g n i t a g i t s Are e v n i they n i bitten, and should only be handled a something Bob rarely does. was claimed , s c i p o r t e by h t n i members y l t s o m k r o w d l e of i f g n the i v l o v n pu e r a This d n a s m e snake t s y s r e v i r e g r a l n i r o a e s t a s e v i l r i e often h t e b n a c and s e k a n s flighty? a e s f o y g o l o Sometimes. c e e h t n o h c r a e s e r As . a e in s t a length g n u o y e v i but l d e m r with o f - y l l u f the g n i p p o r d , s u o r a p i v Nervous i v approximately 1.6 metres bulk y n a r o f s b o j g n i y f s i t a s t s o m e h t f o e n o s e m i t e m o s l l i w d n a , s u o m o n e v y l h g i h o s l a e r a y n a M of a two-metre specimen. y b The s r e some t a w e r u t a r herpetologists e p m e t - h t a b n i g n i v i D . t s question i g o l o t e p r e r e h t i e first d e r u t p a time c n e h w I y tipped l d l i w d n a y l it m o d n a r e k i r stated, t s o r o y t u a e b e t i s i u q x e f o s d n a l s i n o r e h t i e g n i v i l d n r o s t e n d n a h n i r o s e k a n s l a u d i v i d n i r o f g n i v i d from a bag at a show it doubled back and nearly the n LD50 test when it is applied to v . s n o o g a l e n e r e s n i t h g i n r e v o d e r o h c n a s p i h s l l a m s u o r a p i v i v f o s e i c e p s 0 6 t u o b A . s l w a r t l a i c r e m m o c ! e f i l d r a of h a inj s ' t p u o r g e h t d n a , d e s i n g o c e r y l t n e r r u c e r a s e k a n s a e humans, s and even the manner t s a E e l d d i M e h t m o r f , n o i t p e c x e e n o h t i w , s d n e t x e test can y r a v n a c s e c cause n e i r e p x e e variable l b a r u s a e l p e s results. e h t r e v e w o I , o g a l e p i h c r A u y k u y R s ' n a p a J d n a a n i h C n r e h t u o s the o t s e snake’s n i r a m f o s d n i level k e h t o t g of n i d r danger o c c a y l b a r e d i s n o th o g a l e p i h c r A n a i l a r t s u A - o d n I e h t h g u o r h t h t u o s n e judge h t e k a n a by e u r t e h t f o t a h t s i p u o r g t s e g r a l e h T . d e i d u t s g n i e s i n o i t p e c x e e h T . s d n a l s I n o m o l o S e h t d n a i j i F o t ) s i m a l e P ( s i h p o r d y H , e k a n S a e S d e i l l e b - w o l l e Y e human h t e deaths n i r a u t s e w e caused f a m o r f t r a p by a , h c its i h w s bites, e k a n s a e o f o t s a o c t s a e e h t m o r f s e g n a r h c i h w , s u r u t a l p l l a d n e p s , s a e r a l a d i t e v o r g n a m n i t n u h t a h t s e i c e p would fall well behind many oversea account for thousands of human dea Finally, as an indication of the reluct valuable venom on a human, the lar Brown Snake I ever captured (two m the forearm when tailed. At the insis struck my groin. There were yells and gasps from at Atherton Hospital I stayed for thre the crowd as the snake followed one strike with there were no ill effects. Even under another, and when a lady reared back in shock at tailing, this big snake had delivered the snake’s behaviour it struck up at her at a 45-degree angle. Another experienced handler who was present said he had never seen anything like it. iHerp Australia ‘When a lady reared back in behaviour, it shock at the snake’s Issue 12 | May - June 2019 STRUCK UP . 1 AT HER at a 45- degree angle.’ CONTENTS The Indo-Pacific’s Amphibious Sea Kraits. 4 4 Hal Cogger has long held a by Michael Cermak. particular interest in sea Image snakes. The ‘Chaser!’ The much-maligned Eastern Brown Snake (Pseudonaja textilis). ‘One Man’s Poison...’ The amazing properties of Gila Monster venom. An audience with the King. 12 12 17 Australia’s Most Deadly! 22 Part 1: King Cobra field The Coastal Taipan research at Agumbe. (Oxyuranus scutellatus). Michael Cermak examines an elapid Part 2: Once in a lifetime! with a formidable reputation. 26 What’s New? iHerp at LARGE. James Bindoff – all about interest! H istorically, the Coastal Taipan (Oxyuranus scutellatus) has been regarded as Australia’s deadliest snake. The term ‘deadly’ is somewhat ambiguous and is rarely used in herpetological literature today. However, considering that prior to the develop- ment of taipan antivenom in 1955, all victims of bites died, the description is actually quite fitting. George Rosendale, an Aboriginal man still living in north Queensland, remained for many years the only person to survive a taipan bite without the use of specific antivenom. 30 A Good Book. 1. 33 ‘ TERRALOG: Turtles of the World Volume 5’ 34 The Coastal Taipan Australia’s Most Deadly! (Oxyuranus scutellatus). Poison Dart Frogs. A terrible beauty. 40 46 The critically-endangered Saving ‘El Escorpión.’ Guatemalan Beaded Lizard. ‘No biting the hand that feeds!’ 54 This record stood until my friend Shane Black took the lead with not one but two taipan bites; one to his torso and another one between his index and middle fingers. In both cases, Shane did not require antivenom and, apart from relatively mild ‘discomfort’ (according to him), he soldiered on. Although both bites resulted in envenoma- tion, it needs to be pointed out that Shane had previously received many snake bites from different species of elapids, and it’s reasonable to assume that he has built up some resistance against snake venom, akin to Australia’s ‘snake men’ of old. I witnessed the finger bite, and it was a proper one, leaving some venom on the Below left: Uakari Poison Frog (Ranitomeya uakarii) from the Amazonian lowland rainforest. Image by Dirk Ercken. Right: the Golden Poison Frog (Phyllobates terribilis) is the most toxic of all dendrbatid species. Image by Rosa Jay. Below: the Green-and-black Poison Dart Frog (Dendrobates auratus) is Gila Monster (Heloderma suspectum) native he to the tropical rainforest of Central and South history America. Image by colourful interwoven with the Dirk Ercken. T 17 has a colonisation of the American West. Feared and reviled, the aposematic lizard was reputed between colouration and to have toxic breath, and toxicity across lethal species, bite. whereby the an invariably Accounts of terrible suffering most brightly coloured species or populations are the most toxic. For example, across 10 populations of O. pumilio, variation in toxicity was strongly positively correlated with frog colouration brightness and conspicuousness based on avian vision, indicating that the poison frog colours were honest signals of unpalatability to predators, and creating a strong selective pressure for the evolution of aposematic colouration. But aposematic colouration in dendrobatids has since undergone both interspecific and intraspecific 34 and death abound in the period from the 1930s, however, the stories are conflicti appear to have been greatly exaggerated of the ‘victims’ were not exactly in prim the treatment administered for the bites divergences, producing a wide variety of colours and patterns. The taxonomy of dendrobatids has there- fore been thrown into a state of flux. Distinguishing a species can be very taxing, as many species are polymor- phic, with a wide variation in colour and pattern, and some forms can closely resemble other species. Interestingly, there are two instances (Allobates zaparo and Hyloxalus nexipus), in which conspicuous aposematic colouration has evolved without being a ‘truthful’ indicator of toxicity. Tellingly, A. zaparo is known to be a Batesian mimic of the toxic species Ameerega bilinguis and Ameerega parvula with which it is sympatric. Aposematic species are often dietary specialists, preying upon ants, from which they sequester defensive alkaloids. Sa ‘It were about three fe kill I ever heard tell o off its target.....I got s the muzzle in its mou into the river if I had the body clean in two from me and swim aw 40 Feeding Neonate Elapids. Publisher: John McGrath [email protected] IT & Marketing: Andy Round [email protected] Social Media: Vince Pintaudi Additional Design: Rachael Hammond Next Issue: July 2019. Website: www.iherpaustralia.com.au Facebook: www.facebook.com/iherpaustralia/ Postal Address: 12 Haines Street Mitcham, Victoria, 3132 Advertising Enquiries: [email protected] [email protected] On the cover: a Mulga Snake exhibits an impressive defensive posture resembling that of a cobra when approached. In the wild this behaviour sends a clear message to any potential predator to back off. Mulga Snake (Pseudechis australis), Great Victoria Desert, Western Australia. Image by Ross McGibbon. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in our published works are those of the author(s) and do not reflect the opinions of iHerp Australia or its editors. The information contained has been obtained by iHerp Australia from sources believed to be reliable. However, neither iHerp Australia nor its authors guarantees the accuracy or completeness of any information published herein and neither iHerp Australia nor its authors shall be responsible for any errors, omissions, or claims for damages, including exemplary damages, arising out of use, inability to use, or with regard to the accuracy or sufficiency of the information contained in iHerp Australia publications. All rights reserved.