Catching 102 poisonous snakes in Australian people

The owner of a house in Sydney was surprised when the snake -catcher found 102 extremely red black snakes hiding in the garden.

 

The number of red black snakes catch from David Stein’s home garden. Image: Reptile Relocation Sydney

David Stein sees some snakes in a bonf of sawdust in the corner of Sydney’s outskirts and calls the Reptile Relocation Sydney animal rescue service to consider and consider, CNN On February 6 reported. When the Dylan Cooper snake was caught under the sawdust, he caught a total of 102 snakes, including 5 adults and 97 newly born young people, according to the owner of Reptile Relocation Sydney, Cory Kerewaro.

Red black snakes are common poisonous snakes in Australia and female snakes often gather to reproduce. A pregnant female snake caught from the sawdust gave birth to a younger child inside the bag. Cooper takes about 3 hours to remove all snakes in the garden. According to Kerewaro, Stein called a snake catcher promptly before the snakes could spread around the neighborhood.

Stein, a resident of Horsley Park, is about 32 km from the city center, said he found a snake in the week before spreading sawdust for healthy plants to grow. Initially, Stein guessed about 6 snakes. Kerewaro said the snake drive will be released into a national park.

Red black snake is about 1-2 meters long, specializing in eating frogs, small mammals and reptiles. They have a glossy black body on the top, redness and light pink belly. Despite the tendency to avoid humans, they can attack when agitated. The venom of this species often causes pain such as swelling, diarrhea, vomiting, prolonged bleeding and necrosis.

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