A homeowner in California got a surprise after calling a reptile rescue to handle a few rattlesnake sightings in their home: They were sharing their space with at least 92 of the snakes.
Sonoma County Reptile Rescue director Al Wolf pulled 22 adult rattlesnakes and 59 babies from the house's foundations, and later returned to remove 11 more. The area was ideal for rattlesnake denning, Wolf told the Santa Rosa Press-Democrat, because most of the rocks in the ground had been left in when the home's foundation was dug. Wolf released the snakes in an area away from human habitation.
The foundations may have been a rookery, or a place where rattlesnakes gather in large numbers to give birth, said Emily Taylor, a herpetologist at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, who also does rattlesnake relocations. That would explain the large number of babies, Taylor told Live Science. However, the choice of a home's foundations for a rookery is surprising, she said.
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"It's not typical in California at low elevations to have that many snakes, and it's definitely not typical for them to be under a home," she said.
"Research has shown that the females will sometimes babysit for one another," she said, with one mom staying with the baby snakes while another mom goes off to hunt.
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Researchers used to think that snake mamas raised their babies for about two weeks, before the young snakes shed their skin for the first time and set out on their own. But Taylor's research suggests snake motherhood is more complicated. This summer, she set up the first livestream of a rattlesnake rookery, and the initial observations hint that the moms and babies may come and go over a longer period. In a study area near Steamboat Springs, Colorado, where Taylor and her colleagues also observe rattlesnakes, the babies are born in August and stay with their mothers through the winter, while hibernating. In that population, the babies don't head out alone until spring.
"Rattlesnakes are much more complicated than we ever thought before," Taylor said.
"Rattlesnakes generally tend to be very secretive and do not want to encounter people and are only going to bite a person or a pet if they feel like their life is at risk," Taylor said.
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Rattlesnakes do, however, often find a comfortable habitat near humans, who tend to settle near water and shade and attract rodents, she said. California's recent periods of drought have brought snakes into yards, where sprinkler systems provide a water source.
The snakes in the foundation of the home were probably trying to keep to themselves, Taylor said, though if a homeowner had cornered them unexpectedly or stepped on a basking snake, there could have been a risk of a bite. Rattlesnake venom contains neurotoxins, which attack the nervous system, and hemotoxins, which break down the blood; but they are mostly hemotoxins. These hemotoxins cause the tissue to break down around the bite and can cause heavy bleeding, or hemorrhage. Other symptoms include pain, labored breathing, nausea, vomiting and a rapid or weak pulse. Antivenom can help treat the bite and limit the damage, if given within a few hours. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, between 7,000 and 8,000 people are bitten by venomous snakes of any species in the United States each year, and five of those individuals die.
It was once typical for homeowners to kill rattlesnakes on their property, but humans are increasingly recognizing that sudden death isn't the best way to deal with these snakes, Taylor said. In most regions, there are paid services or volunteers who will relocate snakes instead of killing them. One resource is the Free Snake Relocation Directory, which contains contact information for volunteer snake relocators around the United States.
Originally published on Live Science.