Montreal Gazette

SNAKE EGGS IN SCHOOLYARD.

- AVI SELK

When the first child dug the first egg out of the sand, the possibilit­ies were endless and not all of them were terrifying.

Maybe a fluffy chick was inside? That would be cute. Not likely, though. The egg was very small, as were the next 11 children unearthed that day late last month from the sandpit outside St. Joseph’s Catholic school, on the east coast of Australia.

When volunteers from a wildlife conservati­on group arrived at the Laurieton-area school, they decided the eggs — 43 in all — looked decidedly reptilian.

The volunteers at first thought they might be water dragons: pretty lizards sometimes kept as pets that look like they’re smiling.

But when wildlife volunteer Rod Miller shone a light through one of the eggs, the Guardian wrote, he saw no bird or lizard, but a striped baby snake.

Then Miller’s group, Fawna, did a bit more investigat­ing, and announced these 43 eggs contained the deadliest snakes in Australia.

Eastern brown snakes don’t smile. They can grow more than six feet and are one of the most poisonous species in the world. They have killed about two dozen Australian­s since 2000 — usually when one wanders into someone’s home — and are an increasing­ly common sight even in cities.

Now Fawna was informing the parents of St. Joseph’s that in another two weeks or so, dozens of brown snakes would have swarmed out of the sand pit.

The volunteers took the eggs and reburied them in some nearby bushes. But soon skepticism crept in.

Bryan Fry, a biologist at the University of Queensland who had at first told the Guardian the eggs were “definitely” of snakes, began to reconsider.

“I reckon they are indeed water dragon eggs,” he said later, noting lizards have legs to bury with; snakes do not.

“Some experts far more experience­d than our local handler have pointed out that the eggs can’t be brown snake eggs,” Fawna wrote Tuesday, according to the Guardian.

But Miller, the Fawna rescuer who first responded to the sand pit, pushed back. He said he had seen inside an egg what looked like “a small pink worm with a couple of eyes which I can only think was a snake as it had no limbs.”

A volunteer returned to the reburial site Tuesday to inspect the eggs. Whatever they were, they had already hatched.

 ?? FAWNA ?? Children on the east coast of Australia dug up 43 eggs that may have contained poisonous brown snakes.
FAWNA Children on the east coast of Australia dug up 43 eggs that may have contained poisonous brown snakes.

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