Talk:Micrurus fulvius: Difference between revisions

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Sorry to be so tough on you, but I'm just as hard on myself. So much nonsense has been said and published in the media regarding venomous snakes that we must take great care to ensure that these articles are as accurate as possible. (If you want to reply, you can do so here, since I've temporarily added your talk page to my watchlist). --Jaap Winius 11:15, 23 December 2006 (CST)
Sorry to be so tough on you, but I'm just as hard on myself. So much nonsense has been said and published in the media regarding venomous snakes that we must take great care to ensure that these articles are as accurate as possible. (If you want to reply, you can do so here, since I've temporarily added your talk page to my watchlist). --Jaap Winius 11:15, 23 December 2006 (CST)


That little rhyme was taught to me by Professor Herndon G Dowling, a well-known herpetologist who was a full professor of Biology at NYU, and had been curator of snakes and reptiles at both the American Museum of Natural History and the Bronx Zoo in NYC. I do not know the origin of the phrase. Dr. Dowling's teaching points about the coral snake were made during several field trips to the southeastern United States, on which I had the privilege of accompanying him - where many of the mimics live in the wild, and where there are also a number of vipers, as I'm sure you know. His remarks about snake bite were not aimed at a perosn handling the snake, but to a person wandering in natural areas where they are endemic. Whereas the Eastern rattlesnake inflicts many bites on the person who might be cutting brush and trees and not watching their feet - even if shoed, the coral snake accounts for very few fatal or injurious bites to humans in the wild, for the reasons mentioned. [[User:Nancy Sculerati MD|Nancy Sculerati MD]]
That little rhyme was taught to me by Professor Herndon G Dowling, a well-known herpetologist who was a full professor of Biology at NYU, and had been curator of snakes and reptiles at both the American Museum of Natural History and the Bronx Zoo in NYC. I do not know the origin of the phrase. Dr. Dowling's teaching points about the coral snake were made during several field trips to the southeastern United States, on which I had the privilege of accompanying him - where many of the mimics live in the wild, and where there are also a number of vipers, as I'm sure you know. His remarks about snake bite were not aimed at a person handling the snake, but to a person wandering in natural areas where they are endemic. Whereas the Eastern rattlesnake inflicts many bites on the person who might be cutting brush and trees and not watching their feet - even if shoed, the coral snake accounts for very few fatal or injurious bites to humans in the wild, for the reasons mentioned. [[User:Nancy Sculerati MD|Nancy Sculerati MD]]
 
P.S. the teeth in this species are grooved- and in that sense "hollow", but the tooth does not extend all the way around the hollow, and in that sense they are not nearly as effective in delivering venom. I stand by my statement that the teeth are relatively blunt, as compared to viper fangs. [[User:Nancy Sculerati MD|Nancy Sculerati MD]]

Revision as of 13:40, 23 December 2006

I have copied the following from my talk page and moved it to the discussion page of the article, where I think it is relevant. Micrurus fulvius Nancy Sculerati MD

Hi Nancy, While I appreciate your desire to contribute to Micrurus fulvius, I have a number of problems with your last edits to this article. For starters, you did not included any references for the information you added. I like to include references for everything: not only to back up the statements, but also to remind myself of where the information came from (I have many books on the subject). Your statement about the fangs being short, blunt and not hollow is in error. All elapids have hollow fangs with which they inject their venom, although the fang groove is "not perfectly consolidated over the canal" (Wright & Wright, 1957). Your statement furthermore seems to understate the potential seriousness of bites from this species. Before Wyeth antivenin became available, 10-20% of bites were fatal. Stidworthy (1974) mentions that "of the few bites that have been delivered to humans by coral snakes, a high percentage have been fatal." In the United States, there are somewhere between 20 and 60 coral snake bites a year (Campbell & Lamar, 2004). As for the rhyme, it's probably a good idea to include it, but only in the Description section and I insist on a reference. There are also variations of this rhyme. When I was a kid, for example, I learned it as "Red and yellow kills a fellow, Red and black nice to Jack." Regarding your edits to the Description section, those need to be in a separate sentence with their own reference, since Behler & King (1979) do not make the caparison you added. I disagree with your position that most specimens are too small "to easily inflict an open wound". In 1893, L. Stejneger wrote of M. fulvius: "...it has been repeatedly asserted that the mouth of the Elaps is so small that it cannot bite as well as other poisonous snakes. This, however, is somewhat of a mistake" (from Wright & Wright, 1957). In fact, most snake's jaws can open almost 180° and I believe M. fulvius is no exception. It is true that the most coral snake bites are to the hands and fingers, but this is also because the snake is usually being handled when the bite occurs, and not just because the head is relatively small (Campbell & Lamar, 2004). Finally, I'm disappointed about the way you somehow managed to use a generic common name for this species no less than four times within a single paragraph. I try to avoid using any names at all in the text, opting instead for terms such as specimens, snakes and species. After all, it is a monograph! At any rate, all of the information you added to the introduction belongs in the Description section. The introduction is supposed to contain a summary of the rest of the text as opposed to containing any original information. Sorry to be so tough on you, but I'm just as hard on myself. So much nonsense has been said and published in the media regarding venomous snakes that we must take great care to ensure that these articles are as accurate as possible. (If you want to reply, you can do so here, since I've temporarily added your talk page to my watchlist). --Jaap Winius 11:15, 23 December 2006 (CST)

That little rhyme was taught to me by Professor Herndon G Dowling, a well-known herpetologist who was a full professor of Biology at NYU, and had been curator of snakes and reptiles at both the American Museum of Natural History and the Bronx Zoo in NYC. I do not know the origin of the phrase. Dr. Dowling's teaching points about the coral snake were made during several field trips to the southeastern United States, on which I had the privilege of accompanying him - where many of the mimics live in the wild, and where there are also a number of vipers, as I'm sure you know. His remarks about snake bite were not aimed at a person handling the snake, but to a person wandering in natural areas where they are endemic. Whereas the Eastern rattlesnake inflicts many bites on the person who might be cutting brush and trees and not watching their feet - even if shoed, the coral snake accounts for very few fatal or injurious bites to humans in the wild, for the reasons mentioned. Nancy Sculerati MD

P.S. the teeth in this species are grooved- and in that sense "hollow", but the tooth does not extend all the way around the hollow, and in that sense they are not nearly as effective in delivering venom. I stand by my statement that the teeth are relatively blunt, as compared to viper fangs. Nancy Sculerati MD