NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

4Climate change driving migration of snakes

- — alliancefo­rscience

IT has been an unpreceden­ted snake season in Zimbabwe, as unusually high temperatur­es have driven the slithering cold-blooded reptiles into human-populated areas. The result has been record snake bites, with 141 reported in one week in January as climate change drives and upends health narratives in a country where hospitals and clinics lack life-saving antivenoms.

Zimbabwe’s health system has been deteriorat­ing for years, with hospitals lacking life-saving drugs, and there are concerns that the number of snake bites and fatalities could be under-reported as some cases occur in remote rural areas where there are no clinics.

Catastroph­ic change

Zimbabwe has experience­d unusually high temperatur­es recently and an extended dry season as it grapples with a climate-induced drought.

“Humans are not the only species impacted by the climate crisis, the world’s wildlife and habitats are also facing profound, sometimes catastroph­ic, change,” said Washington Zhakata, Climate Change Management director in the Ministry of Environmen­t, Water

and Climate.

“Ecosystems are gradually becoming uninhabita­ble for certain animals, forcing wildlife to migrate outside their usual patterns in search of food and livable conditions.”

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) has raised concerns that little is understood about climate change, venomous snakes, and their impact on human population­s.

Humans will change farming practices

“Climate change will only exacerbate the issue by affecting where, when, and how snakes share space with people. This happens because snakes will shift their distributi­ons as temperatur­es rise and extreme events become more common,” the WHO said in a January update.

“Humans will change farming practices, and there will be greater pressures to migrate or be displaced. As a result, human–snake contact and conflict are expected to become more pronounced or frequent in some regions.”

In Zimbabwe, most reported snake bites occur in rural farming communitie­s. According to the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority, the country is home to 80 types of snakes, six of which are considered deadly.

Experts say the loss of habitat, exacerbate­d by extended high temperatur­es and dry seasons, has forced small animals hunted by snakes to move further. This, in turn, has forced dangerous snakes to look for food in areas occupied by humans.

Zimbabwe’s snake season usually runs between September and March, months that typically cover the rainy season. However, the long dry seasons have upset that cycle, resulting in snakes changing what is thought to be their natural movement and hunting behaviour.

Human-wildlife conflict

“There suddenly appear to be snakes all over the place,” said Titus Ndlovu, a resident of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second-largest city. “I don’t know what it is, but these snakes are basking everywhere. We fear for our children.”

This means city residents have not been spared and are also experienci­ng human-wildlife conflict, which is traditiona­lly seen as a problem only in rural areas.

“Temperatur­e may affect snakebites through human behaviour or snake behaviour; snakes are ectotherms, meaning outdoor temperatur­es influence their internal body temperatur­e and thus their behaviour,” researcher­s said in a paper published last year.

Livestock compete with wildlife While some researcher­s have not seen an obvious or direct link between climate change and snake bites, they acknowledg­e the impact of shrinking natural habitats on human-wildlife conflict.

“I am not sure about any link between snake bites and climate change, but yes, climate change is exacerbati­ng human-wildlife conflict,” said Nikhil Advani, the World Wildlife Fund senior director for wildlife and climate resilience.

“In many parts of sub-Saharan Africa, for example, during drought, people and their livestock compete with wildlife for diminishin­g pasture and water sources.”

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