As most of you are aware Hognose snakes are venomus, but did you know a bite could look as bad as this, coz i didnt. I found this site tonight and just had to post it. This is the very quick summary of the results of a western hognose snake bite. The snake is an apprx. 18 inch male...
www.reptileforums.co.uk
Hi people, I made an account here since I don't really know what to do with this issue anymore and I can't find many relatable stories. I bought my hognose 1.5 year ago as a baby. He was the most docile of the other three available snakes and he stayed like that for a while. +- 6 months ago he...
www.reptileforums.co.uk
Morning all Went to my local reptile shop to get food and looked round what snakes they had, as you do, and they had 2 gorgeous western hognoses, one of each sex. They were both out and about and one came up to the glass to see us. I'm in love!!! Done a bit of research and found they're...
www.reptileforums.co.uk
The subject has come up many times on the forum, I think it is obvious most people on here are well aware of the capacity of
Heterodon to cause envenomating bites as it has been discussed for a few years and more than one member has suffered their effects (I remember April Taylor posting a long thread on CB detailing what happened to her husband when he was bitten).
Sadly many of the photos from those threads have disappeared over time, as they tend to on RFUK servers.
I know I have posted these multiple times in the past but for the sake of completeness and as I have updated it in the last year, here is a list of citations documenting venomous bites from
Heterodon. Remember, Sci-Hub is your friend:
Bragg, Arthur N. "Is Heterodon venomous?." Herpetologica 16.2 (1960): 121-123.
McAlister, Wayne H. "Evidence of mild toxicity in the saliva of the hognose snake (Heterodon)."
Herpetologica 19.2 (1963): 132-137.
Kroll, James Clarence. Comparative physiological ecology of Eastern and Western Hognose Snakes (
Heterodon platyrhinos and
Heterodon nasicus). Diss. Texas A&M University, 1973.
Grogan, William L. "Effects of accidental envenomation from the saliva of the eastern hognose snake, Heterodon platyrhinos." Herpetologica 30.3 (1974): 248-249.
Kroll, James C. "Feeding adaptations of hognose snakes."
The Southwestern Naturalist (1976): 537-557.
Young, Robert Alan. "Physiological and Biochemical characterization of venoms from rear-fanged (opisthogluphous) snakes." (1984): 0070-0070.
Morris, Michael A. "Envenomation from the bite of Heterodon nasicus (Serpentes: Colubridae)." Herpetologica 41.3 (1985): 361-363.
Minton, Sherman A., and Scott A. Weinstein. "Colubrid snake venoms: immunologic relationships, electrophoretic patterns."
Copeia (1987): 993-1000.
Young, Robert A. "Effects of Duvernoy's gland secretions from the eastern hognose snake, Heterodon platirhinos, on smooth muscle and neuromuscular junction."
Toxicon 30.7 (1992): 775-779.
Phillips, S., Rose, B., Kulig, K., Brent, J., 1997. Envenomation from the bite of the Western hognose snake. J. Toxicol. Clin. Toxicol. 35, 532.
Hill, Robert E., and Stephen P. Mackessy. "Characterization of venom (Duvernoy’s secretion) from twelve species of colubrid snakes and partial sequence of four venom proteins."
Toxicon 38.12 (2000): 1663-1687.
Mackessy, Stephen P. "Biochemistry and pharmacology of colubrid snake venoms."
Journal of Toxicology: Toxin Reviews 21.1-2 (2002): 43-83.
Fry, Bryan G., et al. "Analysis of Colubroidea snake venoms by liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry: evolutionary and toxinological implications."
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry 17.18 (2003): 2047-2062.
Fry, Bryan G., et al. "Isolation of a neurotoxin (α-colubritoxin) from a nonvenomous colubrid: evidence for early origin of venom in snakes."
Journal of molecular evolution 57.4 (2003): 446-452.
Averill-Murray, Roy C. "Natural history of the western hog-nosed snake (Heterodon nasicus) with notes on envenomation." Sonoran Herpetologist 19.9 (2006): 98-101.
Fry, Bryan G., et al. "Evolution of an arsenal: structural and functional diversification of the venom system in the advanced snakes (Caenophidia)."
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 7.2 (2008): 215-246.
Weinstein, Scott A., and Daniel E. Keyler. "Local envenoming by the Western hognose snake (Heterodon nasicus): a case report and review of medically significant Heterodon bites." Toxicon 54.3 (2009): 354-360.
Kelley, Lauren Grace. The embeddedness of hognose snakes (
Heterodon spp.) in the wildlife pet trade and the relevance of assemblage geographies for reptile conservation. The Florida State University, 2011.
Brandehoff, Nicklaus, et al. "First reported case of thrombocytopenia from a Heterodon nasicus envenomation." Toxicon 157 (2019): 12-17.
Kato, Kasumi, Hiroshi Kato, and Akimichi Morita. "A case of Western hognose snake bite."
Journal of Cutaneous Immunology and Allergy 2.1 (2019): 37-38.
Nikfarjam, Ulrike, Stephan Grabbe, and Florian Butsch. "Snake bite of western hognose snake (Heterodon nasicus)."
Der Hautarzt; Zeitschrift fur Dermatologie, Venerologie, und Verwandte Gebiete (2021).
Zieliński, Damian. "Questionnaire Background on the Hognose Snake (Heterodon nasicus) Breeders’ Awareness of the Risk of Being Bitten."
Animals 11.12 (2021): 3537.
I also strongly recommend the book:
Weinstein, Scott A., David A. Warrell, and Daniel E. Keyler. "“Venomous Bites from Non-Venomous Snakes: A Critical Analysis of Risk and Management of “Colubrid Snake Bites." (2011).
Although I have to admit I find the title and much of the discourse within somewhat political as, in the words of Wolfgang Wuster, 'it documents case after case after case of colubrid envenoming, yet the authors tie themselves into pretzels trying to deny venom in those species...'
On the other hand it provides some fantastic documentation of what can happen when people misjudge and underestimate their 'harmless' pets. Sadly the book is out of print but not
too expensive and worth hunting out.