JANAKI LENIN, The Hindu,
9/28/10- South Indian king cobras are quite different from Oriya ones.
Even after years in captivity at the Madras Crocodile Bank, the Oriya kings
were just as feisty as day one. I dreaded the days when Rom had to feed them.
The southern snakes would stalk and pounce on the dead rat that Rom dangled
enticingly in front of them. The Oriya snakes, however, would bite the tongs,
plants, and boulders in the enclosure, and after they ran out of things to
bite, grab the rat. Sometimes, they would even look at Rom’s shoes intently
although he stood still.
These temperaments are not an
artifact of captivity. In the Anamalais, Tamil Nadu, one tea estate labourer
brought a large snake flailing inside a gunny sack, saying it was a rat snake.
Inside was a hefty, 10-ft king cobra. Surprisingly, it had not bitten in
self-defence while being caught and stuffed clumsily into the burlap.
One snake catcher in the
mangrove forest of Bhitarkanika, Orissa, wasn’t so lucky; he was bitten on the
nose by a wild king cobra. Even if he had been close to medical help, there is
no anti-venom for king cobra bite in India. Without hesitating for a moment, he
swung his machete and chopped his own nose off. It is possible the snake didn’t
inject any venom, but had the man waited for the symptoms to develop, he might
not have lived to tell the tale.
Pictures of many snake
rescuers free-handling calm king cobras from the Western Ghats circulate on
social networking sites. If these heroes tried a similar stunt with the feisty
Oriya ones, they wouldn’t last a minute.
For centuries,
mongoose-and-cobra fights have been staged by snake charmers. The cobras’ first
line of defence, to sit majestically and menacingly with their heads up and
hoods spread, doesn’t cut any ice with mongooses. We had always assumed the
quick-to-tire reptiles were no match for the agile and swift mammals.
It was only recently, when a
film crew used high-speed cameras, that we realised cobras strike at their
tormentors from the defensive posture without opening their mouths; they were
merely head-butting.
I haven’t found a credible
explanation for their reticence to bite. Rom suggested, “Venom is expensive to
produce. Snakes may want to use it as a last resort.”
I argued, “But this is a
matter of life or death. If a cobra won’t use its venom when a mongoose goes
for its jugular, when is a good time to use it?”
Despite these broad
generalisations about species’ temperaments, there is variation among
individual snakes.
A man showed up at our door
once holding a healthy adult Russell’s viper in his bare hands. I was still
collecting my wits, when he announced he had caught a baby python. Rom
instructed in a calm voice, “Put it down slowly and gently.”
After he flipped the snake
into a bag, he berated the ignorant man.
On another occasion, Rom’s
six-year-old son Samir and his partner in mischief, Kali, brought home a bunch
of saw-scaled vipers in their little hands.
“See dada, baby cat snakes,”
said Samir.
Surprisingly and fortunately,
the normally snappy vipers didn’t bite either of the two kids.
Are these just instances of
good fortune? Why didn’t the snakes bite while being caught? Is it the easy
confidence of the ignorant that protects them? Some say snakes sense
nervousness and react by biting. I wonder if perhaps these individual snakes
are calm by nature. Yet, many nervous and frightened cobras, Russell’s vipers,
and saw-scaled vipers bite tens of thousands of people every year in India.
I asked Rom, “Do you think the
personality of the individual snake determines whether an encounter with a
human ends in a medical emergency?”
Rom scoffed, “How do you
suggest we test if a venomous snake is a Type A personality?”
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