Lesson 20 Snake poison
How it came about that snakes manufactured poison is a mystery. Over the periods their saliva, a
mild, digestive juice like our own, was converted into a poison that a defies analysis even today.
It was not forced upon them by the survival competition; they could have caught and lived on prey
without using poison, just as the thousands of non-poisonous snakes still do. Poison to a snake is
merely a luxury; it enables it to get its food with very little effort, no more effort than one
bite. And why only snakes? Cats, for instance, would be greatly helped; no running fights with
large ,fierce rats or tussles with grown rabbits-just a bite and no more effort needed. In face, it
would be an assistance to all carnivores though it would be a two-edged weapon when they fought
each other. But, of the vertebrate, unpredictable Nature selected only snakes (and one lizard). One
wonders also why Nature, with some snakes, concocted poison of such extreme potency.
In the conversion of saliva into poison, one might suppose that a fixed process took place. It did
not; some snakes manufactured the blood different in every respect from that of others, as different
as arsenic is from strychnine, and having different effects. One poison acts on the nerves, the
other on the blood.
The makers of the nerve poison include the mambas and the cobras and their venom is called
neurotoxic. Vipers (adders) and rattlesnakes manufacture the blood poison. It is said that the
nerve poison is the more primitive of the two, that the blood poison is, so to speak, a newer
product from an improved formula.Be that as it may, the nerve poison does its business with man
far more quickly than the blood poison. This. however, means nothing. Snakes did not acquire their
poison for use against prey such as rats and mice, and the effects on these of viperine poison
is almost immediate.
mild, digestive juice like our own, was converted into a poison that a defies analysis even today.
It was not forced upon them by the survival competition; they could have caught and lived on prey
without using poison, just as the thousands of non-poisonous snakes still do. Poison to a snake is
merely a luxury; it enables it to get its food with very little effort, no more effort than one
bite. And why only snakes? Cats, for instance, would be greatly helped; no running fights with
large ,fierce rats or tussles with grown rabbits-just a bite and no more effort needed. In face, it
would be an assistance to all carnivores though it would be a two-edged weapon when they fought
each other. But, of the vertebrate, unpredictable Nature selected only snakes (and one lizard). One
wonders also why Nature, with some snakes, concocted poison of such extreme potency.
In the conversion of saliva into poison, one might suppose that a fixed process took place. It did
not; some snakes manufactured the blood different in every respect from that of others, as different
as arsenic is from strychnine, and having different effects. One poison acts on the nerves, the
other on the blood.
The makers of the nerve poison include the mambas and the cobras and their venom is called
neurotoxic. Vipers (adders) and rattlesnakes manufacture the blood poison. It is said that the
nerve poison is the more primitive of the two, that the blood poison is, so to speak, a newer
product from an improved formula.Be that as it may, the nerve poison does its business with man
far more quickly than the blood poison. This. however, means nothing. Snakes did not acquire their
poison for use against prey such as rats and mice, and the effects on these of viperine poison
is almost immediate.
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