Showing posts with label venomous creatures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label venomous creatures. Show all posts

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Venomous spider's nest found in Buckinghamshire garden

The nest of a biting venomous spider has been found in a Buckinghamshire garden and council officers have warned residents to be on the alert for more.
Milton Keynes pest controllers have dealt with the nest of a false widow spider but believe there may be others.

The nest was found in Bletchley and officers warn the spiders give a bite which is not lethal but is painful.

They are closely related to the black widow, Liam Mooney from Milton Keynes trading standards said.

"They won't kill you but one person's already had to go to hospital with symptoms including chest pain, nausea and vomiting."

The small spiders are related to the black widow and look similar to them but do not have the distinctive red spot.

Read on...

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Spider shuts down Saarland supermarket

Experts in the western German town of Bexbach are still searching a supermarket for a spider that jumped out of a Colombian fruit crate on Friday. The eight-legged escape artist is thought to be a highly venomous banana spider.


A spokesman for the grocery store told German news agency DAPD that the supermarket remained closed to ensure customer safety.



He said experts were "frantically" working to track down the creature, though there had still been no trace of it.

Staff from the zoo in Neunkirchen are at the scene, and zoo director Norbert Fritsch said the risk is not to be underestimated if the arachnid in question was, indeed, a banana spider.

He said the spider's bites can be life-threatening, even for a healthy adult. Banana spiders can grow to be 13 centimeters in size. The term refers to two genera of spiders, one of which is large but relatively harmless, and another highly venomous species.

The police in Homburg said the spider had been hiding in a case of bananas. It escaped when supermarket employees were unpacking the delivery.

The spider reportedly scurried under a shelf and then disappeared. Pest control specialists were notified, and the store was evacuated.

DAPD/DPA/arp


http://www.thelocal.de/society/20110709-36179.html

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Deadly black widow found in Kent

Vet Mark Rowland with the deadly black widow
Tuesday, June 07 2011
by Alan McGuinness

Its venom is 15 times more deadly than a rattlesnake, it devours males after mating - and it's looking for a new home... in Kent.

A black widow spider was discovered by workers importing cars from the United States at Chatham Docks at the weekend.

It was trapped and taken to a Maidstone veterinary surgery in a Chinese takeaway carton.

Mark Rowland, the owner of Trinity Vet Centre and an expert in zoological medicine says he has never had to deal with something like this before.

He said: "The first thing we thought when it was brought in was: 'Thank god there are not any holes in this'. At least it was secure.

"The thing about Chinese takeaway cartons is that they have got firm lids you can put on.

"The guys had done a good job in entrapping it in that. Although it was not ideal it was better than it could have been.

"If it was brought in a box that would have been a bit more disconcerting.

"We just had to transfer it to a more secure container and double box it so it would not cause any problems."

A bite from a black widow spider can cause muscle pain and spasms, nausea, vomiting, a coma and even death.

"Statistically the fatality rate is five per cent - the only fatalities occur in older people, very young people or those who do not have as robust an immune system as normal.

"The effects of it can last for up to several weeks after - it is quite a nasty experience," said Mr Rowland.

Now he is searching for somewhere, or someone, to take the spider.

"I have started with the local zoological collections - I have contacted London Zoo.

"I have got quite a few contacts in the zoological world so we should be able to find somewhere for her.

"Wherever she goes they will have to have a dangerous wild animal licence because she is a potentially dangerous animal.

"That is why I am exploring this avenue first and then I will send it out to the general public.

"But that would be both irresponsible and illegal if they do not have a licence. Until that time she will remain here."

http://www.kentonline.co.uk/kentonline/news/2011-1/june/7/deadly_black_widow_found_in_ke.aspx
(Submitted by Neil Arnold)

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Deadly Egyptian cobra missing from Bronx Zoo

By Deborah Brunswick, CNN
March 27, 2011 -- Updated 1625 GMT (0025 HKT)

New York (CNN) -- A venomous Egyptian cobra went missing from New York's Bronx Zoo, prompting the closure of the zoo's reptile house until further notice.

Staff was alerted Saturday that the adolescent Egyptian cobra was missing from an off-exhibit enclosure, according to a statement from the zoo. Staff members closed and secured the reptile house.

Zoo officials said they are confident the 20-inch-long snake is contained in a nonpublic, isolated area of the building.

"Based on our knowledge of the natural history and behavior of snakes, we know they seek closed-in spaces and are not comfortable in open areas," the zoo statement said.

The Egyptian cobra is most commonly found in North Africa. Its venom is so deadly that it can kill a full-grown elephant in three hours -- or a person in about 15 minutes, according to wildlife experts. The venom destroys nerve tissue and causes paralysis and death due to respiratory failure.

Scholars believe the Egyptian cobra was known in ancient times as the asp. Legend has it that Cleopatra, the ancient Egyptian queen, used an asp to commit suicide.

http://edition.cnn.com/2011/US/03/27/new.york.missing.cobra/index.html?hpt=T2

Friday, January 7, 2011

Wheelchair bound man diagnoses spider bite after watching documentary

A businessman who spent three years in a wheelchair with a mysterious flesh-eating condition was finally cured after a television documentary about spiders revealed the cause of his condition.

By Caroline Gammell 6:25PM GMT 04 Jan 2011

Brian Holman spent three and a half years unable to walk and facing the prospect of amputation after he developed what he thought was a blister on holiday in Turkey.

Doctors struggled to cure the 55-year-old former owner of a marine business and the wound on his ankle only seemed to get worse.

After two operations to remove the infected skin, refusing amputation and taking morphine to ease the pain, Mr Holman happened to watch a programme on the Discovery Channel in which a woman had suffered a similar fate.

It turned out that she had been bitten by a Brown Recluse Spider, a small but poisonous spider found in Turkey.

"A woman on the show who suffered the same gash had turned out to have been bitten by a poisonous spider,” he said.

"The spider was no bigger than an inch.”

Mr Holman, a father-of-four from Fareham in Hants, had gone on holiday with his wife Catherine to Side in southern Turkey.

"We were only a couple of days into the holiday and we had been swimming in the pool," he said.

"I dried off when I got back to the sun-bed and when I pulled the towel away I noticed a little blister. I looked as if I had burnt my leg but it did not hurt at all.

"My wife just said I had better keep it covered up but we did not think any more of it. I did not realise it was a spider bite at the time.

"I did notice two or three around the pool – they were very tiny with spindly legs but I never put two and two together until I saw the programme months later.”

Doctors initially thought he was suffering from a combination of bad sunburn and varicose veins.

After watching the programme Mr Holman consulted his GP who told him to see Pauline Edney, a lead clinical nurse at Fareham College's Community Leg Care Centre.

He said: “I will never forget the look of horror on her face when she saw the wound. She told me straight she didn't think she would be able to heal it."

However, after six weeks of cleaning, dressing and compressing the wound which was several inches wide, it started to heal and has now almost completely recovered.

“I don't think I will ever be the same again because of the damage the spider's venom did to the nerve endings,” he said.

“But at the end of the day, Pauline has given me back my life and saved my leg.”

Miss Edney said: "All we did here is wash it, put cream on, redress it in a new dressing, and kept it compressed in a bandage.

"Once you get into the cycle of treatment doctors then tend to over-treat and forget to go back to basics. Maybe it just needed some fresh eyes.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/8239391/Wheelchair-bound-man-diagnoses-spider-bite-after-watching-documentary.html

Wheelchair bound man diagnoses spider bite after watching documentary

A businessman who spent three years in a wheelchair with a mysterious flesh-eating condition was finally cured after a television documentary about spiders revealed the cause of his condition.

By Caroline Gammell 6:25PM GMT 04 Jan 2011

Brian Holman spent three and a half years unable to walk and facing the prospect of amputation after he developed what he thought was a blister on holiday in Turkey.

Doctors struggled to cure the 55-year-old former owner of a marine business and the wound on his ankle only seemed to get worse.

After two operations to remove the infected skin, refusing amputation and taking morphine to ease the pain, Mr Holman happened to watch a programme on the Discovery Channel in which a woman had suffered a similar fate.

It turned out that she had been bitten by a Brown Recluse Spider, a small but poisonous spider found in Turkey.

"A woman on the show who suffered the same gash had turned out to have been bitten by a poisonous spider,” he said.

"The spider was no bigger than an inch.”

Mr Holman, a father-of-four from Fareham in Hants, had gone on holiday with his wife Catherine to Side in southern Turkey.

"We were only a couple of days into the holiday and we had been swimming in the pool," he said.

"I dried off when I got back to the sun-bed and when I pulled the towel away I noticed a little blister. I looked as if I had burnt my leg but it did not hurt at all.

"My wife just said I had better keep it covered up but we did not think any more of it. I did not realise it was a spider bite at the time.

"I did notice two or three around the pool – they were very tiny with spindly legs but I never put two and two together until I saw the programme months later.”

Doctors initially thought he was suffering from a combination of bad sunburn and varicose veins.

After watching the programme Mr Holman consulted his GP who told him to see Pauline Edney, a lead clinical nurse at Fareham College's Community Leg Care Centre.

He said: “I will never forget the look of horror on her face when she saw the wound. She told me straight she didn't think she would be able to heal it."

However, after six weeks of cleaning, dressing and compressing the wound which was several inches wide, it started to heal and has now almost completely recovered.

“I don't think I will ever be the same again because of the damage the spider's venom did to the nerve endings,” he said.

“But at the end of the day, Pauline has given me back my life and saved my leg.”

Miss Edney said: "All we did here is wash it, put cream on, redress it in a new dressing, and kept it compressed in a bandage.

"Once you get into the cycle of treatment doctors then tend to over-treat and forget to go back to basics. Maybe it just needed some fresh eyes.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/8239391/Wheelchair-bound-man-diagnoses-spider-bite-after-watching-documentary.html

Friday, July 16, 2010

Man eats poisonous snake for bet

15 July 2010, 10:19

An Indian man has narrowly avoided death after swallowing a poisonous snake in a wager for just over £1.

Zaver Rathod had killed the reptile moments earlier after it bit one of his friends.

He then ate the raw snake for a 100 rupee (£1.39) bet after being encouraged by work colleagues, reports The Times of India.

Rathod was soon rushed to hospital suffering with severe nausea and vomiting.

Had the snake's venom entered the 35-year-old's blood stream, he would almost certainly have died, but doctors successfully removed the contents of his stomach in time.

http://web.orange.co.uk/article/quirkies/Man_eats_poisonous_snake_for_bet

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Swarm Of Toxic Jellyfish Found Off UK Coast

1:20pm UK, Tuesday June 15, 2010

Emma Langman, Sky News Online

Hundreds of giant venomous jellyfish have turned up at the Cornish coast in their search for food.

The Lion's Mane jellyfish, or Cyanea capillata, have a sting which can cause muscle paralysis, leading to suffocation and heart attacks.

The swarm of newcomers was first discoverd by diver Andy Pearson, who was surrounded by more than 200 of them while looking for basking sharks at Sennen Cove, Coverack Cove and Kynance Cove in southern Cornwall.

He also saw groups of the smaller and rarer blue jellyfish, which carry a nasty sting too.

Although he described the sight as "spectacular", Mr Pearson warned fellow divers and swimmers of the danger.

He said: "Usually there will be one or two but the jellyfish were literally everywhere in the water. It was worrying.

"Swimmers really need to be careful because the Lion's Mane can give a potent sting."

Ruth Williams, of the Cornwall Wildlife Trust, said: "It's unusual to get them in such massive swarms in Cornwall."

She also said swimmers must be careful and should stay "well clear of their trailing tentacles".

A spokesman for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution said they were aware of the danger and advised beach users to take care.

The Lion's Mane is one of the largest species of jellyfish. While their sting itself is not lethal, their tentacles are covered in stinging cells which can cause blisters and severe muscular cramp, affecing the respiratory system and heart function.

The creatures, which can reach up to 10ft long, are normally found further north in the colder Arctic and northern Atlantic oceans, but the freezing winter has made the southern seas cold enough for them.

http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/UK-News/Hundreds-Of-Venomous-Lions-Mane-Jellyfish-Found-Off-The-Cornish-Coast/Article/201006315649499

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

The cave of bones: A story of solenodon survival

Tuesday, 1 June 2010
By Rebecca Morelle Science reporter, BBC News, Sierra de Bahoruco, Dominican Republic

Conservationists are in the Dominican Republic attempting to save one of the world's most strange and ancient mammals - the Hispaniolan solenodon.

While trying to track down one of these creatures, The Last Survivors team is also trying to find out exactly how this animal has been able to survive for a remarkable 76 million years.

It is pitch black.

Splashes of light from our torches illuminate patches of the vast cavern we are standing in, every now and then highlighting bats as they swoop above.

Fine dust swirls, coating everything.

The last few remains of a human skeleton sit ominously close to the entrance - but that is not why the scientists are here.

It is the piles of tiny bones poking out, here and there, on the sediment and bat dropping caked floor that are attracting all the attention.

We are in a cave nestled in a cliff face in the Dominican Republic's tropical forests. It is reached by a startlingly steep ascent, then a deep drop into darkness.

Scientists think it could hold one of the keys to finding out how the Hispaniolan solenodon has been able to survive for so long, while nearly all other life around it has died out.

'Living fossil'

But before we get to the cave, we need to rewind a little.

Seventy-six million years, in fact. To the time when dinosaurs roamed the Earth.

This is when a hunk of land attached to the great landmass that today forms North America broke away, taking with it some insectivorous mammals - the ancestors of the solenodon.

These creatures might not have looked much different to the animal we are hoping to spot on this expedition.

Conservation palaeontologist Sam Turvey, from the Zoological Society of London who is working on The Last Survivors project and the Edge of Existence Programme, says: "There is this concept of the solenodon being a 'living fossil', because it does seem to have retained certain, potentially ancient, features."

One of these is the groove in its teeth, which allows it to inject venom into passing insect prey - a unique feature, among today's mammals.

Dino-disaster

This lump of land carrying these strange animals, would later, after a few more breaks and fractures, become the island of Hispaniola, which contains the Dominican Republic and Haiti.

But just 11 million years after it slowly began to drift away from the supercontinent, devastation hit nearby.

A colossal space rock, 10-15km across, smashed into the Earth at the northern edge of what is now the Yucatan Peninsula, wiping out the dinosaurs that had dominated the world until that point.

Dr Turvey says: "The Caribbean islands were much closer to the mainland then, and this would have been close to 'ground zero'."

In the immediate aftermath, the impact would have caused massive rises in temperature and giant tsumamis. Later, the planet would have been shrouded in darkness, casting a devastating shadow over any animal hoping to survive.

Yet, while the dinosaurs and much other prehistoric life perished, somehow - and theories abound that it might have been because it burrowed - the solenodon survived.

Skip forward a few more tens of millions of years, and the solenodon proves itself a champion survivor once again. First, by coping with the super-hot "greenhouse Earth" of the Eocene Period, then major changes in global ecosystems, and later, the Ice Age.

But stop the clock at 6,000 years ago, and suddenly the plucky mammal had to contend with one of the biggest threats to Caribbean fauna to date - humans.

Before humans arrived, there were about 25 land mammals on the island. But one by one they died out, leaving only the solenodon and a rodent called the The Last Survivors Hispaniolan hutia as the last mammals standing.

What had happened?

Dr Turvey says: "If you want to find the smoking gun responsible for these extinctions, you need to find out exactly when these animals actually disappeared."

And so, back to the cave.

Within just a few moments of entering the dusty tomb, hidden away in a dark corner, we stumble across a fossil treasure trove.

As the layers of dust are carefully swept away, tiny bones begin to emerge.

"A giant hutia… That's a pygmy sloth… Here's a spiny rat," exclaims Dr Turvey

All several thousand years old. And all now extinct.

Finds like this provide a window into the past: through carbon dating, the researchers can find out exactly when the different species died out.

And then they can see whether the extinctions can be linked to humans or other changes on the island.

No bones?

In his extensive trawls through caves like this one, Dr Turvey has noticed a strange anomaly - a lack of solenodon bones.

He has only found a couple of tiny fragments of ancient solenodons, despite months and months of searching. But fossil finds of now-extinct species have been much more common.

Dr Turvey says: "This raises a lot of important questions - and rightfully so.

"Why did these species die out while the solenodons survived? What were the key ecological differences between these species?"

In their more recent history, solenodons have faced greater threats still.

When Christopher Columbus arrived in Hispaniola in 1492, rats began to leap off his ships onto the island, causing havoc.

But, while others perished, the solenodon survived the rat onslaught.

Dr Turvey thinks the venomous beasts may have been so resilient thanks to what he describes as the "Goldilocks hypothesis".

Very small mammals, such as the now-extinct pygmy shrew, could have easily have become the victims of the black rats.

Whereas the solenodon, which is close to rabbit-sized, probably had fewer problems with rats thanks to its heftier bulk.

But while the solenodon is bigger, it is not too big, which according to Dr Turvey, means it probably escaped the attention of hungry humans.

He explains: "If you are hunting something for dinner, you're more likely to go for something like a sloth or a monkey."

So, he says, it is possible that solenodon is a sort of "halfway house" - not too small and not too big.

He adds: "Like in Goldilocks, they're just right."

Ultimate survivors

Whatever happened to make the solenodon the ultimate survivor, allowing it to hang on against all the odds, the researchers fear that more modern problems like deforestation and the threats from very recent introductions, such as mongoose and dogs, could put a stop to its 76-million-year story.

But researchers say that delving into the solenodon's history could help to ensure its future.

As we emerge from the darkness of the cave and begin to prepare for our next night-trek into the forest, where we will try to come face to face with one of these fanged furballs, Dr Turvey takes a last look back into the cave.

Trying to piece together the puzzle of what happened to Hispaniola's mammals in the past, he says, might just help us to figure out how to save these last survivors today.
See video and illustrations at:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/science_and_environment/10147688.stm
(Submitted by Dawn Holloway)

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Solenodon hunt: On the trail of a 'living fossil'

The solenodon is one of just a handful of venomous mammals
Sunday, 30 May 2010
By Rebecca Morelle Science reporter, BBC News, Sierra de Bahoruco, Dominican Republic

It is swelteringly hot and unbearably humid as we set off on our journey deep into the heart of the Dominican Republic's tropical forests.

And as we drive along the bone-joltingly bumpy track, crammed into a truck loaded with enough supplies for our week in the wilderness, the excitement amongst the researchers grows.

We are on our way to see if we can track down one of the most strange and ancient mammals in the world - the Hispaniolan solenodon.

But finding one will not be easy: naturalists once thought that you would be more likely to see a ghost than this elusive creature. And, indeed, few have ever come face-to-face with one.

The nocturnal solenodon, which is only found in the Dominican Republic and in one of the last forested patches of Haiti, is often described as a "living fossil", thanks to the fact that it has been around, virtually unchanged, for the past 76 million years.

Remarkably, this means it would have once scuttled amongst the giant feet of the dinosaurs, in the days when they roamed the Earth.

And it is an odd-looking animal.

It is the size of a rabbit, with a ginger-brown coat. It has disproportionately large, clawed feet, beady little eyes and a very long, thin nose.

But perhaps its most bizarre - and prehistoric - feature is that it is the only mammal that can inject venom through its teeth, the same way a snake does.

The poison, while not deadly to humans, is the perfect tool for the insectivore, allowing it to dine on bugs as it moves around the forest at night.

Last survivors


But this unique creature is now under threat.

The Dominican Republic and Haiti, which together make up the island of Hispaniola, used to have a diverse mix of monkeys, shrews, sloths and rodents, but these have died out one by one.

This has left the solenodon and a tree-dwelling rodent called the hutia as the only native mammals that remain.

Now, researchers from the UK and the Dominican Republic, with the help of a grant from the UK government's Darwin Initiative, have embarked on a project called The Last Survivors, which they say could be our last chance to save the solenodon and hutia before they vanish from the forests forever.

The programme involves the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), the Hispaniolan Ornithological Society (SOH) and the Dominican Republic's national zoo and environment ministry.

Dr Richard Young, head of conservation science at Durrell, explains: "The problem is that we really don't know anything about these animals - we don't know where they are, how many there are and how this relates to their habitats.

"And before you can start to conserve them, you need to answer some really basic questions."

But, given the suggestion that a supernatural sighting might be more likely than snatching a glance of a solenodon, finding these creatures to uncover the answers is not going to be easy.

And in fact, says Jorge Brocca, SOH's director, few people in the Dominican Republic have ever seen one, and many have never heard of them.

He explains: "We've been showing local people photographs, and most of them do not know what these animals are."

We head for the Sierra de Bahoruco, a mountain range in the south-west of the Dominican Republic, which straddles the border with Haiti. At its highest point it reaches an elevation of 2,200m (7,200ft).

As we negotiate the steep incline, we see a spectacular range of habitats - from dry, cactus-studded forests in the lowlands, up to vibrant, cloud forests dotted with giant trees, ferns and mosses, and finally, at the peak, a pine forest, that looks something like a tropical version of Scandinavia.

Here, the team is surveying patches of forest for solenodons - the start of an attempt to get a comprehensive grasp of the mammal's spread across the country.

Much of this work takes place during the day, while the animals are sound asleep in their burrows.

As we trek ever deeper into the forest, Durrell's Joe Nunez-Mino, who is working in the field with the SOH's Pedro Martinez and local research assistants Nicolas Corona and Lleyo Espinal, tells me that trying to find them feels a bit like being a detective.

The first clue, he says, is the "nose poke" - he points to one as we tramp through the dense vegetation.

He explains: "These are holes that the creatures make in the ground as they use their long noses to probe the earth as they look for insects."

Nearby, we find what might be the entrance of a burrow.

He bends down and takes a deep sniff inside the cave.

Solenodons, he says, have a really musty smell, a bit like a goat. And sure enough, a pungent odour seeps out of the cave - an exciting sign that one might be in there.
Long wait

But until night falls, the solenodon will remain asleep in its subterranean den, and there is little more we can do here.

So we return to our wooden cabin, set in a small clearing, and feast upon our campfire-cooked meal, waiting for darkness to descend over the forest.

For the ZSL's Dr Sam Turvey, who works on the Edge of Existence Programme, the prospect of spotting a solenodon is thrilling.

"I cannot tell you how excited I am about seeing one. Being in the middle of the forest, in the middle of nowhere, in the night, is going to be amazing," he says.

"It's going to be one of those life-defining moments to see one in the wild."

We know our chances of finding one might be slim, but with good weather, the expert skills of our local research assistants and a huge pinch of luck, we grow ever more hopeful that we might soon become some of the fortunate few to have come face-to-face with this elusive forest "ghost".

See video at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/science_and_environment/10146397.stm

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Five bitten in spate of spider bites

From: AAP March 15, 2010 4:15PM

NSW paramedics have dealt with a spate of spider bites, with four people thought to be victims of the venomous redback.

A 15-year-old girl suffered fit-like symptoms this morning after being bitten by an unidentified spider at Tamworth, in regional NSW, yesterday.

Four other people, including an eight-year-old boy and a 15-year-old girl, were bitten by what were believed to be redback spiders today, the Ambulance Service of NSW says.

The attacks at Kingswood and Alfords Point in Sydney and Berkeley Vale and Mudgee in regional NSW.

All the victims are expected to make full recoveries.

A NSW Ambulance spokeswoman said recent warm weather had probably increased the chances of people encountering spiders.

The warmer weather has also led to a series of snake bites in NSW, with eight people bitten in six days last week.

http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/five-bitten-in-spate-of-spider-bites/story-e6frfku0-1225841012449