The Citizen (Gauteng)

’Tis a season for sssssnakes

BEWARE: THE FOLLOWING TYPICALLY FOUND IN SA HOUSEHOLDS

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Learn about SA’s serpents, colours, behaviour and levels of danger to you.

From November to April, most notably after the first rains, certain areas experience snake season. This is according to accredited destinatio­n management company Siyabonga Africa, and snake expert Jason Arnold.

This week, Arnold received a call-out for a 2.2m black mamba at a home in Durban’s northern suburb of Avoca. This was one of five he rescued in the past week.

Following an influx of snake-related incidents, The Citizen has compiled a list of snakes typically found in a household.

Non-venomous snakes

The most common snake found in homes is the brown house snake, which is found throughout southern Africa. It is uniform redbrown, with larger, older snakes becoming significan­tly darker.

The African rock python is Africa’s largest snake. It has a large spearhead mark on the crown of the head, with dark and light bands radiating from eye to lip. It is found in the Lowveld, KwaZulu-Natal South Coast, Limpopo and the Northern Cape.

Large, robust with a non-flattened nose and long tail, the olive grass snake occurs in the northern parts, extending south along the KwaZulu-Natal coast. Although not venomous, a bite

may cause pain and nausea.

Venomous snakes

A large snake, with large, round pupils, the boomslang may be leaf-green, bright green with dark grey, black-edged belly scales, or brick-red to rusk-red, with an orange-pink belly. They are found along the east and south coast to Cape Town. The black mamba, despite its name, only has a black mouth lining. The rest of the body is gunmetal to olive-brown. Their venom is neurotoxic and cardiotoxi­c.

Found throughout SA, the puff adder’s head is flattened and triangular, and its venom is cytotoxic. It is responsibl­e for the most bites and fatalities in Africa. – Citizen reporter

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Picture: i Stock
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