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Six snake bites prompt warning:[Final Edition] |
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People: |
Prior,
Kent |
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Author(s): |
Stephanie
Cesca |
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Article
types: |
News |
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Dateline: |
TORONTO |
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Section: |
Canada |
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Publication
title: |
Standard. St.
Catharines, Ont.: Aug 12, 2002. pg. A.8 |
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Source
Type: |
Newspaper |
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ISSN/ISBN: |
08373434 |
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ProQuest
document ID: |
266634771 |
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Text
Word Count |
291 |
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Article
URL: |
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Abstract (Article Summary) |
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"We are
tracking six reported bites in the area this year. As bites are up, obviously
people should take care," [John Birnbaum] said, noting that normally only
one or two people are bitten each summer by the brown-and-grey rattlesnake
that grows up to a metre long. If anyone is
bitten, [Kent Prior] suggests seeking immediate medical attention, even
though venom is discharged in only about 60 per cent of rattlesnake bites.
All hospitals near the snake's habitats carry antivenin to treat bites, Prior
said. |
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Full Text (291 words) |
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(Copyright The Standard (St. Catharines) 2002) TORONTO -
Cottagers and residents of the Georgian Bay area are being urged to take
extra care when outdoors this summer after six people were bitten by
potentially deadly rattlesnakes. John Birnbaum,
executive director of the Georgian Bay Association, an umbrella organization
that represents 4,500 families, said that six people in and around the area
have been bitten this summer by the Massasauga rattlesnake, the only
poisonous snake in Ontario. "We are
tracking six reported bites in the area this year. As bites are up, obviously
people should take care," Birnbaum said, noting that normally only one
or two people are bitten each summer by the brown-and-grey rattlesnake that
grows up to a metre long. Kent Prior, a
species-at-risk adviser at Environment Canada, said the increase in bites
could be attributed to two possible reasons: either the snakes are more
active this summer, given the hot and dry weather, or there's been a jump in
the reptile's population. "My sense
is that it's probably a combination of (those reasons)," Prior said. Currently,
there are only four areas of habitat for the Massasauga, considered a
threatened species in Ontario. The small and slow-moving snake known to spend
most of its life alone and in hiding can be found in two large areas around
Georgian Bay, as well as in Windsor and Port Colborne. The population
of the snake, estimated to be somewhere in the thousands, has suffered a
steady decline and is believed to have decreased by about 60 per cent within
the last decade. If anyone is
bitten, Prior suggests seeking immediate medical attention, even though venom
is discharged in only about 60 per cent of rattlesnake bites. All hospitals
near the snake's habitats carry antivenin to treat bites, Prior said. |