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Puff adder

The puff adder (Bitis arietans) is a viper species found in savannahs and grasslands from Morocco and western Arabia throughout Africa except for the Sahara and rainforest regions.[3] It is responsible for causing the most snakebite fatalities in Africa owing to various factors, such as its wide distribution, frequent occurrence in highly populated regions, and aggressive disposition.[4][5] Like all other vipers, it is venomous. Two subspecies are currently recognized, including the nominate subspecies described here.[6]

Puff adder
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Serpentes
Family: Viperidae
Genus: Bitis
Species:
B. arietans
Binomial name
Bitis arietans
(Merrem, 1820)
Distribution range[1]
Synonyms
Click to expand
  • Cobra lachesis Laurenti, 1768
  • Cobra clotho Laurenti, 1768
  • Coluber lachesis Gmelin, 1788
  • Coluber clotho — Gmelin, 1788
  • Coluber bitin Bonnaterre, 1790
  • Coluber intumescens
    Donndorff, 1798
  • Vipera severa
    Latreille In Sonnini & Latreille, 1801
  • Vipera (Echidna) arietans
    Merrem, 1820
  • Vipera inflata Burchell, 1822
  • Echidna arietans Wagler, 1828
  • Vipera brachyura Cuvier, 1829
  • Vipera arietans Schlegel, 1837
  • Clotho (Bitis) arietans Gray, 1842
  • Clotho (Bitis) lateristriga Gray, 1842
  • Echidna arietans A.M.C. Duméril, Bibron & A.H.A. Duméril, 1854
  • Bitis arietans Günther, 1858
  • Bitis arietans Boulenger, 1896
  • Cobra lachesis Mertens, 1937
  • Bitis lachesis — Mertens, 1938
  • Bitis lachesis lachesis
    — de Witte, 1953
  • Bitis arietans arietans
    Loveridge, 1953
  • Bitis arietans peghullae
    Steward, 1973
  • Bitis arietans — Golay et al., 1993
  • Vipera (Clotho) arietans
    — Herprint Int'l, 1994
  • Bitis arietans
    — Spawls & Branch, 1995[2]

The species is commonly known as the puff adder,[4][7] African puff adder,[8][9] or common puff adder.[10]

Taxonomy Edit

German naturalist Blasius Merrem described the puff adder in 1820. The word arietans means "striking violently" and is derived from the Latin arieto.[11] The type locality given is "Promontorio bonae spei" (Cape of Good Hope), South Africa.[2]

Subspecies Edit

Subspecies[6] Taxon author[6] Common name Geographic range
B. a. arietans (Merrem, 1820) African puff adder Throughout Africa from southern Morocco down to the Western Cape of South Africa, across to the south-west Arabian Peninsula[4][5]
B. a. somalica Parker, 1949 Somali puff adder Somalia, northern Kenya[4]

Description Edit

The snake's typical size is about 1.0 m (39.3 in) in total length (body and tail) and very stout. Large specimens of 190 cm (75 in) total length, weighing over 6.0 kg (13.2 lb) and with a girth of 40 cm (16 in) have been reported. Specimens from Saudi Arabia are not as large, usually no more than 80 cm (31 in) in total length. Males are usually larger than females and have relatively longer tails.[4]

 
B. arietans (adult)

The color pattern varies geographically. The head has two well-marked dark bands – one on the crown and the other between the eyes. On the sides of the head, two oblique, dark bands or bars run from the eye to the supralabials. Below, the head is yellowish white with scattered dark blotches. Iris color ranges from gold to silver-gray. Dorsally, the ground color varies from straw yellow, to light brown, to orange or reddish brown. This is overlaid with a pattern of 18–22 backwardly directed, dark brown to black bands that extend down the back and tail. Usually, these bands are roughly chevron-shaped, but may be more U-shaped in some areas. They also form two to six light-and-dark cross-bands on the tail. Some populations are heavily flecked with brown and black, often obscuring other coloration, giving the animal a dusty-brown or blackish appearance. The belly is yellow or white, with a few scattered dark spots. Newborn young have golden head markings with pinkish to reddish ventral plates toward the lateral edges.[4][7]
One unusual specimen, described by Branch and Farrell (1988), from Summer Pride, East London, in South Africa, was striped. The pattern consisted of a narrow (one scale wide), pale yellowish stripe that ran from the crown of the head to the tip of the tail.[4]
Generally, though, these are relatively dull-looking snakes, except for male specimens from highland East Africa and the Western Cape province of South Africa, that usually have a striking yellow-and-black color pattern.[7]

Puff adders have a form of olfactory crypsis which has been shown to make detecting them difficult for trained dogs and meerkats, both scent-based predators. The exact nature of this ability is not known, but is hypothesized to be related to a low metabolic rate, as well as relocation after shedding and defecating.[12]

Scalation Edit

The head has a less than triangular shape with a blunt and rounded snout. Still, the head is much wider than the neck. The rostral scale is small. The circumorbital ring consists of 10–16 scales. Across the top of the head, there are 7–11 interocular scales; three or four scales separate the suboculars and the supralabials. It has 12 to 17 supralabials and 13–17 sublabials. The first three or four sublabials contact the chin shields, of which only one pair exists. Often, two fangs are on each maxilla, and both can be functional.[4][7]

Midbody, the snake has 29–41 rows of dorsal scales. These are strongly keeled except for the outermost rows. The ventral scale count is 123–147, the subcaudals number 14–38. Females have no more than 24 subcaudals. The anal scale is single.[4]

Distribution and habitat Edit

This species may be the most common and widespread snake in Africa.[4] It is found in most of sub-Saharan Africa south to the Cape of Good Hope, including southern Morocco, Mauritania, Senegal, Mali, southern Algeria, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Niger, Nigeria, Chad, Sudan, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, northern, eastern, and southern Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda, Kenya, Somalia, Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania, Angola, Zambia, Malawi, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa. It also occurs on the Arabian Peninsula, where it is found in southwestern Saudi Arabia and Yemen.

It is found in all habitats except true deserts, rainforests, and (tropical) alpine habitats. It is most often associated with rocky grasslands.[13] It is not found in rainforest areas, such as along the coast of West Africa and in Central Africa (i.e., central DR Congo); it is also absent from the Mediterranean coastal region of North Africa. On the Arabian Peninsula, it is found as far north as Ta'if.[7] It has been reported to be found in the Dhofar region of southern Oman.[14]

Behaviour Edit

 
Squirrel trailing a puff adder while sounding an alarm call to warn others

Normally a sluggish species, the puff adder relies on camouflage for protection. Locomotion is primarily rectilinear, using the broad ventral scales in a caterpillar fashion and aided by its own weight for traction. When agitated, it can resort to a typical serpentine movement of surprising speed.[4][13] Although mainly terrestrial, these snakes are good swimmers and can also climb with ease; often they are found basking in low bushes. One specimen was found 4.6 m above the ground in a densely branched tree.[4]

If disturbed, they hiss loudly and continuously, adopting a tightly coiled defensive posture with the forepart of their body held in a taut "S" shape. At the same time, they may attempt to back away from the threat towards cover. They may strike suddenly and fast, to the side as easily as forwards, before returning quickly to the defensive position, ready to strike again. During a strike, the force of the impact is so strong, and the long fangs penetrate so deeply, that prey items are often killed by the physical trauma alone. The fangs apparently can penetrate soft leather.[4][13]

They can strike to a distance of about one-third of their body length, but juveniles can launch their entire bodies forwards in the process. These snakes rarely grip their victims, but instead release quickly to return to the striking position.[4]

Puff adder puffing (Greyton, Western Cape, South Africa)

Feeding Edit

Mostly nocturnal, they rarely forage actively, preferring, instead, to ambush prey as it happens by. Their prey includes mammals, birds, amphibians, and lizards.

Reproduction Edit

 
B. a. arietans, juvenile (ready to strike)

Females produce a pheromone to attract males, which engage in neck-wrestling combat dances. A female in Malindi was followed by seven males.[5] They give birth to large numbers of offspring; litters over 80 have been reported, while 50–60 are not unusual. Newborns are 12.5–17.5 cm in length.[13] Very large specimens, particularly those from East Africa, give birth to the highest numbers of offspring. A Kenyan female in a Czech zoo gave birth to 156 young, the largest litter for any species of snake.[5][7]

Captivity Edit

These snakes do well in captivity, but gluttony has been reported. Kauffeld (1969) mentions that specimens can be maintained for years on only one meal per week, but that when offered all they can eat, the result is often death, or at best wholesale regurgitation.[9] They are bad-tempered snakes, and some specimens never settle down in captivity, always hissing and puffing when approached.[5]

Venom Edit

This species is responsible for more snakebite fatalities than any other African snake, due to a combination of factors, including its wide distribution, common occurrence, large size, potent venom that is produced in large amounts, long fangs, and their habit of basking by footpaths and sitting quietly when approached.[4][5][7]

The venom has cytotoxic effects[15] and is one of the most toxic of any vipers based on LD50.[4] The LD50 values in mice vary: 0.4–2.0 mg/kg intravenously, 0.9–3.7 mg/kg peritoneally, and 4.4–7.7 mg/kg subcutaneously (SC).[16] Mallow et al. (2003) give an LD50 range of 1.0–7.75 mg/kg SC. Venom yield is typically 150–350 mg, with a maximum of 750 mg.[4] Brown (1973) mentions a venom yield of 180–750 mg.[16] About 100 mg are thought to be enough to kill a healthy adult human male, with death occurring after 25 hours.

In humans, bites from this species can produce severe local and systemic symptoms. Based on the degree and type of local effect, bites can be divided into two symptomatic categories – those with little or no surface extravasation, and those with hemorrhages evident as ecchymosis, bleeding, and swelling. In both cases, severe pain and tenderness occur, but in the latter, widespread superficial or deep necrosis and compartment syndrome are seen.[17] Serious bites cause limbs to become immovably flexed as a result of significant hemorrhage or coagulation in the affected muscles. Residual induration, however, is rare and usually these areas completely resolve.[4]

Other bite symptoms that may occur in humans include edema, which may become extensive, shock, watery blood oozing from the puncture wounds, nausea and vomiting, subcutaneous bruising, blood blisters that may form rapidly, and painful swelling of the regional lymph nodes. Swelling usually decreases after a few days, except for the area immediately around the bite site. Hypotension, together with weakness, dizziness, and periods of semi- or unconsciousness is also reported.[4]

If not treated carefully, necrosis will spread, causing skin, subcutaneous tissue, and muscle to separate from healthy tissue and eventually slough with serous exudate. The slough may be superficial or deep, sometimes down to the bone. Gangrene and secondary infections commonly occur and can result in loss of digits and limbs.[4][5][7]

The fatality rate highly depends on the severity of the bites and some other factors. Deaths can be exceptional and probably occur in less than 15% of all untreated cases (usually in 2–4 days from complications following blood volume deficit and disseminated intravascular coagulation), although some reports show that severe envenomations have a 52% mortality rate.[3][18] Most fatalities are associated with poor clinical management and neglect.[5][7]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Wagner, P.; Wilms, T.; Luiselli, L.; Penner, J.; Rödel, M.-O.; Els, J.; Al Johany, A.M.H.; Egan, D.M.; Beraduccii, J.; Howell, K.; Msuya, C.A.; Ngalason, W.; Turner, A.A.; Zassi-Boulou, A.-G.; Kusamba, C.; Chippaux, J.-P. (2021). "Bitis arietans". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2021: e.T197461A2485974. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2021-3.RLTS.T197461A2485974.en.
  2. ^ a b McDiarmid RW, Campbell JA, Touré T. 1999. Snake Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference, Volume 1. Herpetologists' League. 511 pp. ISBN 1-893777-00-6 (series). ISBN 1-893777-01-4 (volume).
  3. ^ a b U.S. Navy. 1991. Venomous Snakes of the World. US Govt. New York: Dover Publications Inc. 203 pp. ISBN 0-486-26629-X.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Mallow D, Ludwig D, Nilson G. 2003. True Vipers: Natural History and Toxinology of Old World Vipers. Krieger Publishing Company, Malabar, Florida. 359 pp. ISBN 0-89464-877-2.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Spawls S, Howell K, Drewes R, Ashe J. 2004. A Field Guide to the Reptiles of East Africa. A & C Black Publishers Ltd., London. 543 pp. ISBN 0-7136-6817-2.
  6. ^ a b c "Bitis arietans". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 24 July 2006.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Spawls S, Branch B. 1995. The Dangerous Snakes of Africa. Ralph Curtis Books. Dubai: Oriental Press. 192 pp. ISBN 0-88359-029-8.
  8. ^ Fichter GS. 1982. Venomous Snakes. (A First Book). Franklin Watts. 66 pp. ISBN 0-531-04349-5.
  9. ^ a b Kauffeld C. 1969. Snakes: The Keeper and the Kept. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc. 248 pp. LCCCN 68-27123.
  10. ^ Bitis arietans at Munich AntiVenom INdex. Accessed 2 August 2007.
  11. ^ Chambers Murray Latin-English Dictionary (1976)
  12. ^ Miller, Ashadee Kay; Maritz, Bryan; McKay, Shannon; Glaudas, Xavier; Alexander, Graham J. (22 December 2015). "An ambusher's arsenal: chemical crypsis in the puff adder (Bitis arietans)". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. The Royal Society. 282 (1821): 20152182. doi:10.1098/rspb.2015.2182. ISSN 0962-8452. PMC 4707760. PMID 26674950.
  13. ^ a b c d Mehrtens JM. 1987. Living Snakes of the World in Color. New York: Sterling Publishers. 480 pp. ISBN 0-8069-6460-X.
  14. ^ Bitis arietans at the Reptarium.cz Reptile Database. Accessed 2 August 2007.
  15. ^ Widgerow AD, Ritz M, Song C. 1994. Load cycling closure of fasciotomies following puff adder bite. European Journal of Plastic Surgery 17: 40-42. Summary at . Accessed 31 August 2008.
  16. ^ a b Brown JH. 1973. Toxicology and Pharmacology of Venoms from Poisonous Snakes. Springfield, Illinois: Charles C. Thomas. 184 pp. LCCCN 73-229. ISBN 0-398-02808-7.
  17. ^ Rainer PP, Kaufmann P, Smolle-Juettner FM, Krejs GJ (2010). "Case report: Hyperbaric oxygen in the treatment of puff adder (Bitis arietans) bite". Undersea & Hyperbaric Medicine. 37 (6): 395–398. PMID 21226389. Archived from the original on 15 April 2013. Retrieved 8 January 2012.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  18. ^ Davidson, Terence. . University of California, San Diego. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 14 September 2011.

Further reading Edit

  • Access Professional Development. 2022. Puff Adder (Bitis arietans). [Online] Available: https://accesspd.co.za/species/PuffAdder (Accessed: 02/02/2022)
  • Boulenger GA. 1896. Catalogue of the Snakes in the British Museum (Natural History). Volume III., Containing the...Viperidæ. London: Trustees of the British Museum (Natural History). (Taylor and Francis, printers.) xiv + 727 pp. + Plates I.- XXV. (Bitis arietans, pp. 493–495.)
  • Branch, Bill. 2004. Field Guide to Snakes and Other Reptiles of Southern Africa. Third Revised edition, Second impression. Sanibel Island, Florida: Ralph Curtis Books. 399 pp. ISBN 0-88359-042-5. (Bitis arietans, pp. 114–115 + Plates 3, 12.)
  • Broadley DG, Cock EV. 1975. Snakes of Rhodesia. Zimbabwe: Longman Zimbabwe Ltd. 97 pp.
  • Broadley DG. 1990. FitzSimons' Snakes of Southern Africa. Parklands (South Africa): J Ball & AD Donker Publishers. 387 pp.
  • Merrem B. 1820. Versuch eines Systems der Amphibien: Tentamen Systematis Amphibiorum. J.C. Krieger. Marburg. xv + 191 pp. + 1 plate.
    ("Vipera. Echidna. arietans", p. 152.)
  • Pienaar U de V. 1978. The reptile fauna of Kruger National Park. National Parks Board of South Africa. 19 pp.
  • Sweeney RCH. 1961. Snakes of Nyasaland. Zomba, Nyasaland: The Nyasaland Society and Nyasaland Government. 74 pp.
  • Turner RM. 1972. Snake bite treatment. Black Lechwe 10 (3): 24–33.

External links Edit

  • Video of B. g. gabonica and B. arietans. on YouTube Accessed 9 December 2006.
  • Video of two puff adders: B. a. arietans and B. a. somalica. on YouTube. Accessed 1 March 2007.
  • at South African Vaccine Producers. Accessed 26 July 2008.
  • – paper in ejournal Ornithological Observations

puff, adder, this, article, about, viper, species, common, puff, adder, native, africa, viper, subfamily, commonly, known, puff, adders, bitis, venomous, snake, native, north, america, colloquially, known, puff, adder, heterodon, puff, adder, bitis, arietans, . This article is about the viper species common puff adder native to Africa For the viper subfamily commonly known as puff adders see Bitis For the non venomous snake native to North America colloquially known as puff adder see Heterodon The puff adder Bitis arietans is a viper species found in savannahs and grasslands from Morocco and western Arabia throughout Africa except for the Sahara and rainforest regions 3 It is responsible for causing the most snakebite fatalities in Africa owing to various factors such as its wide distribution frequent occurrence in highly populated regions and aggressive disposition 4 5 Like all other vipers it is venomous Two subspecies are currently recognized including the nominate subspecies described here 6 Puff adderConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaOrder SquamataSuborder SerpentesFamily ViperidaeGenus BitisSpecies B arietansBinomial nameBitis arietans Merrem 1820 Distribution range 1 SynonymsClick to expand Cobra lachesis Laurenti 1768Cobra clotho Laurenti 1768Coluber lachesis Gmelin 1788Coluber clotho Gmelin 1788Coluber bitin Bonnaterre 1790Coluber intumescens Donndorff 1798Vipera severa Latreille In Sonnini amp Latreille 1801Vipera Echidna arietans Merrem 1820Vipera inflata Burchell 1822Echidna arietans Wagler 1828Vipera brachyura Cuvier 1829Vipera arietans Schlegel 1837Clotho Bitis arietans Gray 1842Clotho Bitis lateristriga Gray 1842Echidna arietans A M C Dumeril Bibron amp A H A Dumeril 1854Bitis arietans Gunther 1858Bitis arietans Boulenger 1896Cobra lachesis Mertens 1937Bitis lachesis Mertens 1938Bitis lachesis lachesis de Witte 1953Bitis arietans arietans Loveridge 1953Bitis arietans peghullae Steward 1973Bitis arietans Golay et al 1993Vipera Clotho arietans Herprint Int l 1994Bitis arietans Spawls amp Branch 1995 2 The species is commonly known as the puff adder 4 7 African puff adder 8 9 or common puff adder 10 Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Subspecies 2 Description 2 1 Scalation 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour 5 Feeding 6 Reproduction 7 Captivity 8 Venom 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksTaxonomy EditGerman naturalist Blasius Merrem described the puff adder in 1820 The word arietans means striking violently and is derived from the Latin arieto 11 The type locality given is Promontorio bonae spei Cape of Good Hope South Africa 2 Subspecies Edit Subspecies 6 Taxon author 6 Common name Geographic rangeB a arietans Merrem 1820 African puff adder Throughout Africa from southern Morocco down to the Western Cape of South Africa across to the south west Arabian Peninsula 4 5 B a somalica Parker 1949 Somali puff adder Somalia northern Kenya 4 Description EditThe snake s typical size is about 1 0 m 39 3 in in total length body and tail and very stout Large specimens of 190 cm 75 in total length weighing over 6 0 kg 13 2 lb and with a girth of 40 cm 16 in have been reported Specimens from Saudi Arabia are not as large usually no more than 80 cm 31 in in total length Males are usually larger than females and have relatively longer tails 4 B arietans adult The color pattern varies geographically The head has two well marked dark bands one on the crown and the other between the eyes On the sides of the head two oblique dark bands or bars run from the eye to the supralabials Below the head is yellowish white with scattered dark blotches Iris color ranges from gold to silver gray Dorsally the ground color varies from straw yellow to light brown to orange or reddish brown This is overlaid with a pattern of 18 22 backwardly directed dark brown to black bands that extend down the back and tail Usually these bands are roughly chevron shaped but may be more U shaped in some areas They also form two to six light and dark cross bands on the tail Some populations are heavily flecked with brown and black often obscuring other coloration giving the animal a dusty brown or blackish appearance The belly is yellow or white with a few scattered dark spots Newborn young have golden head markings with pinkish to reddish ventral plates toward the lateral edges 4 7 One unusual specimen described by Branch and Farrell 1988 from Summer Pride East London in South Africa was striped The pattern consisted of a narrow one scale wide pale yellowish stripe that ran from the crown of the head to the tip of the tail 4 Generally though these are relatively dull looking snakes except for male specimens from highland East Africa and the Western Cape province of South Africa that usually have a striking yellow and black color pattern 7 Puff adders have a form of olfactory crypsis which has been shown to make detecting them difficult for trained dogs and meerkats both scent based predators The exact nature of this ability is not known but is hypothesized to be related to a low metabolic rate as well as relocation after shedding and defecating 12 Scalation Edit See also Snake scale Nomenclature of scales The head has a less than triangular shape with a blunt and rounded snout Still the head is much wider than the neck The rostral scale is small The circumorbital ring consists of 10 16 scales Across the top of the head there are 7 11 interocular scales three or four scales separate the suboculars and the supralabials It has 12 to 17 supralabials and 13 17 sublabials The first three or four sublabials contact the chin shields of which only one pair exists Often two fangs are on each maxilla and both can be functional 4 7 Midbody the snake has 29 41 rows of dorsal scales These are strongly keeled except for the outermost rows The ventral scale count is 123 147 the subcaudals number 14 38 Females have no more than 24 subcaudals The anal scale is single 4 Distribution and habitat EditThis species may be the most common and widespread snake in Africa 4 It is found in most of sub Saharan Africa south to the Cape of Good Hope including southern Morocco Mauritania Senegal Mali southern Algeria Guinea Sierra Leone Cote d Ivoire Ghana Togo Benin Niger Nigeria Chad Sudan Cameroon the Central African Republic northern eastern and southern Democratic Republic of the Congo Uganda Kenya Somalia Rwanda Burundi Tanzania Angola Zambia Malawi Mozambique Zimbabwe Botswana Namibia and South Africa It also occurs on the Arabian Peninsula where it is found in southwestern Saudi Arabia and Yemen It is found in all habitats except true deserts rainforests and tropical alpine habitats It is most often associated with rocky grasslands 13 It is not found in rainforest areas such as along the coast of West Africa and in Central Africa i e central DR Congo it is also absent from the Mediterranean coastal region of North Africa On the Arabian Peninsula it is found as far north as Ta if 7 It has been reported to be found in the Dhofar region of southern Oman 14 Behaviour Edit Squirrel trailing a puff adder while sounding an alarm call to warn othersNormally a sluggish species the puff adder relies on camouflage for protection Locomotion is primarily rectilinear using the broad ventral scales in a caterpillar fashion and aided by its own weight for traction When agitated it can resort to a typical serpentine movement of surprising speed 4 13 Although mainly terrestrial these snakes are good swimmers and can also climb with ease often they are found basking in low bushes One specimen was found 4 6 m above the ground in a densely branched tree 4 If disturbed they hiss loudly and continuously adopting a tightly coiled defensive posture with the forepart of their body held in a taut S shape At the same time they may attempt to back away from the threat towards cover They may strike suddenly and fast to the side as easily as forwards before returning quickly to the defensive position ready to strike again During a strike the force of the impact is so strong and the long fangs penetrate so deeply that prey items are often killed by the physical trauma alone The fangs apparently can penetrate soft leather 4 13 They can strike to a distance of about one third of their body length but juveniles can launch their entire bodies forwards in the process These snakes rarely grip their victims but instead release quickly to return to the striking position 4 source source source source source source source source source source source source Puff adder puffing Greyton Western Cape South Africa Feeding EditMostly nocturnal they rarely forage actively preferring instead to ambush prey as it happens by Their prey includes mammals birds amphibians and lizards Reproduction Edit B a arietans juvenile ready to strike Females produce a pheromone to attract males which engage in neck wrestling combat dances A female in Malindi was followed by seven males 5 They give birth to large numbers of offspring litters over 80 have been reported while 50 60 are not unusual Newborns are 12 5 17 5 cm in length 13 Very large specimens particularly those from East Africa give birth to the highest numbers of offspring A Kenyan female in a Czech zoo gave birth to 156 young the largest litter for any species of snake 5 7 Captivity EditThese snakes do well in captivity but gluttony has been reported Kauffeld 1969 mentions that specimens can be maintained for years on only one meal per week but that when offered all they can eat the result is often death or at best wholesale regurgitation 9 They are bad tempered snakes and some specimens never settle down in captivity always hissing and puffing when approached 5 Venom EditThis species is responsible for more snakebite fatalities than any other African snake due to a combination of factors including its wide distribution common occurrence large size potent venom that is produced in large amounts long fangs and their habit of basking by footpaths and sitting quietly when approached 4 5 7 The venom has cytotoxic effects 15 and is one of the most toxic of any vipers based on LD50 4 The LD50 values in mice vary 0 4 2 0 mg kg intravenously 0 9 3 7 mg kg peritoneally and 4 4 7 7 mg kg subcutaneously SC 16 Mallow et al 2003 give an LD50 range of 1 0 7 75 mg kg SC Venom yield is typically 150 350 mg with a maximum of 750 mg 4 Brown 1973 mentions a venom yield of 180 750 mg 16 About 100 mg are thought to be enough to kill a healthy adult human male with death occurring after 25 hours In humans bites from this species can produce severe local and systemic symptoms Based on the degree and type of local effect bites can be divided into two symptomatic categories those with little or no surface extravasation and those with hemorrhages evident as ecchymosis bleeding and swelling In both cases severe pain and tenderness occur but in the latter widespread superficial or deep necrosis and compartment syndrome are seen 17 Serious bites cause limbs to become immovably flexed as a result of significant hemorrhage or coagulation in the affected muscles Residual induration however is rare and usually these areas completely resolve 4 Other bite symptoms that may occur in humans include edema which may become extensive shock watery blood oozing from the puncture wounds nausea and vomiting subcutaneous bruising blood blisters that may form rapidly and painful swelling of the regional lymph nodes Swelling usually decreases after a few days except for the area immediately around the bite site Hypotension together with weakness dizziness and periods of semi or unconsciousness is also reported 4 If not treated carefully necrosis will spread causing skin subcutaneous tissue and muscle to separate from healthy tissue and eventually slough with serous exudate The slough may be superficial or deep sometimes down to the bone Gangrene and secondary infections commonly occur and can result in loss of digits and limbs 4 5 7 The fatality rate highly depends on the severity of the bites and some other factors Deaths can be exceptional and probably occur in less than 15 of all untreated cases usually in 2 4 days from complications following blood volume deficit and disseminated intravascular coagulation although some reports show that severe envenomations have a 52 mortality rate 3 18 Most fatalities are associated with poor clinical management and neglect 5 7 References Edit a b Wagner P Wilms T Luiselli L Penner J Rodel M O Els J Al Johany A M H Egan D M Beraduccii J Howell K Msuya C A Ngalason W Turner A A Zassi Boulou A G Kusamba C Chippaux J P 2021 Bitis arietans IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2021 e T197461A2485974 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2021 3 RLTS T197461A2485974 en a b McDiarmid RW Campbell JA Toure T 1999 Snake Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference Volume 1 Herpetologists League 511 pp ISBN 1 893777 00 6 series ISBN 1 893777 01 4 volume a b U S Navy 1991 Venomous Snakes of the World US Govt New York Dover Publications Inc 203 pp ISBN 0 486 26629 X a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Mallow D Ludwig D Nilson G 2003 True Vipers Natural History and Toxinology of Old World Vipers Krieger Publishing Company Malabar Florida 359 pp ISBN 0 89464 877 2 a b c d e f g h Spawls S Howell K Drewes R Ashe J 2004 A Field Guide to the Reptiles of East Africa A amp C Black Publishers Ltd London 543 pp ISBN 0 7136 6817 2 a b c Bitis arietans Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 24 July 2006 a b c d e f g h i Spawls S Branch B 1995 The Dangerous Snakes of Africa Ralph Curtis Books Dubai Oriental Press 192 pp ISBN 0 88359 029 8 Fichter GS 1982 Venomous Snakes A First Book Franklin Watts 66 pp ISBN 0 531 04349 5 a b Kauffeld C 1969 Snakes The Keeper and the Kept Garden City New York Doubleday amp Company Inc 248 pp LCCCN 68 27123 Bitis arietans at Munich AntiVenom INdex Accessed 2 August 2007 Chambers Murray Latin English Dictionary 1976 Miller Ashadee Kay Maritz Bryan McKay Shannon Glaudas Xavier Alexander Graham J 22 December 2015 An ambusher s arsenal chemical crypsis in the puff adder Bitis arietans Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences The Royal Society 282 1821 20152182 doi 10 1098 rspb 2015 2182 ISSN 0962 8452 PMC 4707760 PMID 26674950 a b c d Mehrtens JM 1987 Living Snakes of the World in Color New York Sterling Publishers 480 pp ISBN 0 8069 6460 X Bitis arietans at the Reptarium cz Reptile Database Accessed 2 August 2007 Widgerow AD Ritz M Song C 1994 Load cycling closure of fasciotomies following puff adder bite European Journal of Plastic Surgery 17 40 42 Summary at Springerlink Accessed 31 August 2008 a b Brown JH 1973 Toxicology and Pharmacology of Venoms from Poisonous Snakes Springfield Illinois Charles C Thomas 184 pp LCCCN 73 229 ISBN 0 398 02808 7 Rainer PP Kaufmann P Smolle Juettner FM Krejs GJ 2010 Case report Hyperbaric oxygen in the treatment of puff adder Bitis arietans bite Undersea amp Hyperbaric Medicine 37 6 395 398 PMID 21226389 Archived from the original on 15 April 2013 Retrieved 8 January 2012 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Davidson Terence IMMEDIATE FIRST AID University of California San Diego Archived from the original on 2 April 2012 Retrieved 14 September 2011 Further reading EditAccess Professional Development 2022 Puff Adder Bitis arietans Online Available https accesspd co za species PuffAdder Accessed 02 02 2022 Boulenger GA 1896 Catalogue of the Snakes in the British Museum Natural History Volume III Containing the Viperidae London Trustees of the British Museum Natural History Taylor and Francis printers xiv 727 pp Plates I XXV Bitis arietans pp 493 495 Branch Bill 2004 Field Guide to Snakes and Other Reptiles of Southern Africa Third Revised edition Second impression Sanibel Island Florida Ralph Curtis Books 399 pp ISBN 0 88359 042 5 Bitis arietans pp 114 115 Plates 3 12 Broadley DG Cock EV 1975 Snakes of Rhodesia Zimbabwe Longman Zimbabwe Ltd 97 pp Broadley DG 1990 FitzSimons Snakes of Southern Africa Parklands South Africa J Ball amp AD Donker Publishers 387 pp Merrem B 1820 Versuch eines Systems der Amphibien Tentamen Systematis Amphibiorum J C Krieger Marburg xv 191 pp 1 plate Vipera Echidna arietans p 152 Pienaar U de V 1978 The reptile fauna of Kruger National Park National Parks Board of South Africa 19 pp Sweeney RCH 1961 Snakes of Nyasaland Zomba Nyasaland The Nyasaland Society and Nyasaland Government 74 pp Turner RM 1972 Snake bite treatment Black Lechwe 10 3 24 33 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bitis arietans Snakes portalVideo of B g gabonica and B arietans on YouTube Accessed 9 December 2006 Video of two puff adders B a arietans and B a somalica on YouTube Accessed 1 March 2007 Image of B arietans bite that resulted in fasciotomy at South African Vaccine Producers Accessed 26 July 2008 Birds mob Puff Adder paper in ejournal Ornithological Observations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Puff adder amp oldid 1153916056, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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