Abstract
Encounters between humans and dangerously venomous snakes put both
participants at serious risk, so the determinants of such encounters warrant
attention. Pseudonaja textilis is a large fast-moving
elapid snake responsible for most snakebite fatalities in Australia. As part
of a broad ecological study of this species in agricultural land near Leeton,
New South Wales, we set out to identify factors influencing the probability
that a human walking in farmland would come into close proximity to a
brownsnake. Over a three-year period, we walked regular transects to quantify
the number and rate of snake encounters, and the proportion of snakes above
ground that could be seen. The rate of encounters depended upon a series of
factors, including season, time of day, habitat type, weather conditions (wind
and air temperature) and shade (light v. dark) of the observers’
clothing. Interactions between factors were also important: for example, the
effect of air temperature on encounter probability differed with season and
snake gender, and the effect of the observers’ shade of clothing
differed with cloud cover. Remarkably, even a highly-experienced observer
actually saw <25% of the telemetrically monitored snakes that were
known to be active (i.e. above ground) nearby. This result reflects the
snakes’ ability to evade people and to escape detection, even in the
flat and sparsely vegetated study area. The proportion of snakes that were
visible was influenced by the same kinds of factors as described above. Most
of the factors biasing encounter rates are readily interpretable from
information on other facets of the species’ ecology, and knowledge of
these factors may facilitate safer coexistence between snakes and people.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
16 articles.
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