Poisonous Snakes Can Really Trigger Fear And Some Of The Most Unaffirmative Feelings


Poisonous snakes can surely cause fear and some of the most negative feelings towards some this crawling part of the animal world. The venom of poisonous snakes has such a lethal impact that it can kill one in no more than thirty minutes, not to mention the risk of getting blind if any of the toxins are sprayed into the eyes. Although the risk of bites remains high when you accidentally come across them, poisonous snakes prove in fact disarmed as they rely on their venom to survive: no snake will bite unless in defense or to hunt its meal . The rest of the negative impression on snakes comes from a faulty perception nurtured by ancient myths.

The arrangement of the venom secreted by poisonous snakes is very complex: there is mainly a combination of proteins and toxins that when spread in the prey's body paralyze and eventually kill it. The toxin weakens the muscles, the lungs and the heart, and starting from this action mode scientists have classified poisonous snakes into species that destroy the walls of the blood vessels and cause unstoppable hemorrhage, venomous species that paralyze the heart and, last but not least, others that inflict terrible muscle pain. The poisonous snakes with the most frightening of reputations are corals closely followed by cobras.

The intricacies of snake venom still make the subject of comprehensive scientific studies. The only cure for poisonous snakes bites is the immediate administration of antivenins. There are however some factors that increase or decrease the victim's chances of staying alive: thus, an identification of the snake is a necessity as well as the proper location of the bite. If too much time lapses between the moment of the bite and the antidote injection, the victim will suffer extensive health damage or even die. Furthermore, Sometimes patients showed allergic reactions to both the venom and the antidote, increasing the lethal exposure even more.

Rattlesnakes cause most of the bites in the United States, yet lethal outcomes of such incidents have become a rarity these days since medical assistance is usually very readily available. The water moccasin, the copperhead and the cottonmouth belong to the same poisonous family as the rattlesnake; they are highly poisonous snakes too that would surely mark the days of anyone who gets bitten. Stressful incidents involving snake attacks are often behind snake phobia or this excessive fear can be the result of sociological ancestral beliefs that are present even with people who have never felt threatened by a snake.

The snake is also a mythical representation not just an animal people feel abhorred by. The representations of snakes in our arts and cultures go back to the ancient mythical cults. On the one hand, serpents are part of ecosystems, with a well-established function in the evolution of certain species, and secondly they are symbols of deep meanings. Their hunting mice and rats limits the risk of pest and prevents rodents from over-breeding. Yet, in the very old traditions, types of snake worshiping were part of religious rites, with the serpent symbolizing deities, or the eternal circle of life and death or wisdom.

Many types of snake-related traditions have been discovered around the globe: for the old Greeks the snake was the a sign of sexual potency; Mesopotamians and Semites attributed immortal features to this creature because it moulted and it rejuvenated its look on a regular basis; Indians, Siamese and Burmese considered the snake the embodiment of a demon that is not entirely bad.