Snake sightings increase as rain continues

How to tell if snake is venomous

Jessica Alderson, an Urban Biologist with Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, sent these photos of snakes homeowners may see. This is a picture of a venomous rattlesnake.

SAN ANTONIO – Widespread thunderstorms have brought 4-5 inches of rain to South Texas in the past week, with some areas getting as much at 10 inches.

Due to heavy rains there has been an increase in snake sightings around the city.

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Snakes seek higher ground and shelter from the rain, which means they could show up in your house or neighborhood.

The photo below shows a snake eating a frog on the San Antonio Riverwalk on Tuesday. 

Keep storage areas, such as your garage or shed, as clean and tidy as possible. Snakes can fit through tiny openings and easily hide in shadowy areas.

Wood and brush piles should be kept as far away from your residence as possible. Exercise caution everywhere, including the dark areas of your home. Snakes can make their way into the most unlikely of places.

Reason No. 152 on why not to play in the high water (Thx to Sierra L. in Sealy for the pic) #HoustonFlood MORE PHOTOS -> http://on.khou.com/20R0Nl3

Posted by Doug Delony KHOU on Monday, April 18, 2016

Types of snakes

The four common venomous snakes in South Texas are copperheads, cottonmouths, rattlesnakes and coral snakes.

Copperheads are usually light colored with red/brown crossbands along their body. They can be found along streams and rivers and heavily weeded areas.

Cottonmouths, also known as water moccasins, are usually darker in color. They can be dark brown, olive green and even solid black. The cottonmouth prefers swamps, rivers, ponds and waterways, something to be wary of when visiting the Riverwalk.

Coral snakes are highly venomous and commonly confused with the nonvenomous milk snake. Coral snakes typically have a black head with a red, yellow and black pattern. Milk snakes usually have a red head with a black, red, black and yellow pattern.

An easy way to remember the difference between the coral and milk snake is to recite the rhyme “red touch yellow, kill a fellow, red touch black, friend of Jack.”

Rattlesnakes are the easiest to identify because of the rattle at the end of their bodies. Different types of rattlesnakes prefer different environments. Some like marshes and others seek a drier climate.

Be careful when letting animals out to go to the bathroom, venomous snakes could be lurking in the grass and bite your pet.

If you’re bitten

It’s better to assume a snake is poisonous and have it turn out not to be, than to assume the other way around.

Initial symptoms of a poisonous snakebite could include burning sensations around the puncture wounds. Swelling, skin discoloration, blurred vision, and drowsiness could also indicate a venomous snakebite.

Sometimes symptoms might not occur until 24 hours after a venomous bite. It’s crucial to identify the snake after you have been bitten.

Wash bite areas with disinfectant if it’s available and remove jewelry before swelling starts. Try and keep the infected area below your heart to slow the spread of venom to your heart.

Call 911 or get the victim to a medical facility as soon as possible.

Do not

• Make incisions near the bite marks
• Constrict blood flow using a tourniquet
• Use cold compresses or ice near the infected area
• Drink alcohol; it thins the blood
• Use aspirin or equivalent; it increases bleeding

Most poisonous snakes in South Texas, with the exception of the coral snake, will be thick and fat instead of thin.


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