got bit by copperhead

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
common water snake... found in most every state....
if you were bitten by a copperhead, you would know within seconds.
 
heck yes you'd know quick. And even if it was a dry bite, a copperhead would leave two very noticeable puncture wounds from the fangs.
 
i caught it wehile in alabama a couple weeks ago. kept it for the day and put a green anol in with it and it killed it by striking. i did have two puncture marks and they blead a lil bit also.
 
I agree, it is not a copperhead. It may be a water snake, or perhaps a fox snake.

A few people have suggested the posability of a dry bite, and suggested that young snake are mor venomous than adult snakes. These two assumptions go hand in hand, but both are false. A baby snake does not posses more potent venom then the adults, they simply lack the ability to control how much venom is injected. This means every bite from a baby snake will be a hot bite, were as not evry bite from an adult snake contains venom becuase they can control its use.

Somone else expresed the fear that you would be dead or paralized if you had been bitten by a copperhead. This also is not true. Copperheads posses hemotoxic venom, meaning it destroys blood cells and tissue but dose not cause paralasis. Also it is very rare to die from a copperhead. I do not recall the exact numbers right now, but it takes somthing like 100 mg. of venom to kill a healthy adult. However copperheads are only capable of injecting about 75 mg. of venom. Most deaths occur due to reactoins or from bite from multiple snakes.

One of the instructers were I got my degree (recreation and wildlife management) was biten by one of the copperheads he kept. He recieved the bite in a moment of stupidity (talking to a girl on the phone to schedule a date while trying to change the snakes water) He described the bite as being able to "ruin your weekend" (i.e. imense pain) but not somting that would kill you.

Lastly, the idea that copperheads must chew the venom into you was mentioned. This also is not true. They are not rear fanged, the are pit vipers and thus are front fanged. (pit vipers poses some of the most advanced fangs, the are retractable, not fixed)

I'm sorry for the long post, but I prefer to dispel reptile rumors whenever I can.
 
lovespunaround;484901; said:
That's not a copperhead.

you bet your sweet a$% that isnt a copperhead. looks like some species of banded watersnake. i grew up in appalachia, and know from hard learned experience about the bite of a copper. feels something like having two red hot nails being driven into you. the fever and nausea alone will make you feel like Sick as H&^%! i got bitten right above the ankle, and by the time i got to the ER they had to CUT my sneaker off the foot was so swolen.
 
Another thing is that if it were a mocassin (copperhead, cottonmouth, cantil, etc...), it would (as a baby) have a bright yellow-green tail.
 
Common water snake. I see them here all the time when im out fishing. ;)
 
DeLgAdO;485671; said:
boooooooooi your lucky that wasnt a copperhead you would be one dead sucker

two puncture marks?? O_o

it had fangs

dry bite

your lucky:nilly:


Copperhead bites are rarely fatal to a healthy adult.
 
MonsterFishKeepers.com