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By WILLIAM CONWAY | FRESH TALK The Hartford
Courant
6:18 p.m. EST, December 3, 2013
The timber rattlesnake, which is extinct in Rhode
Island and Maine, is one of Connecticut's endangered species and is reportedly
is losing the battle with humans, a trend that should be reversed.
Timber rattlesnakes find welcoming habitat in
central Connecticut's rocky, wooded hills. From April to October, rattlesnakes
leave their dens in search of food, which can lead them through people's yards
and into woodpiles or stone walls. This past rattlesnake season, 45 sightings of
the snake were reported to officials in and around Glastonbury, where there is a
major concentration of the state's remaining rattlers.
Unfortunately, officials investigating the 45
reports of rattlesnake sightings found nine of these snakes to be dead. It is
paramount that Glastonbury
residents, and all co-inhabitants of timber rattlesnake territory statewide, are
aware that, under the Connecticut Endangered Species Act of 1989 and the Federal
Endangered Species Act of 1973, the killing of the rattlers is
prohibited.
If the threat of legal punishment for the killing of
the timber rattlesnake is not enough, perhaps a recent study concerning the
ecosystem benefits of the reptiles can convince citizens to spare the snakes'
lives.
Humans have vilified the rattlesnake throughout
human history. In many cultures, rattlesnakes are symbols of pure evil. A recent
study by a team of University of Maryland biologists, however, proves that the
timber rattlesnake provides indirect health benefits to humans.
Timber rattlers feed primarily on mice. After
studying the snake's eating habits in eastern forests, the University of
Maryland biologists found that each timber rattlesnake also consumes 2,500 to
4,500 blacklegged ticks living on the mice it eats each year. If there are any
critters more hated than snakes, it just might be ticks.
But this is not a case of choosing between the
lesser of two evils. Protecting the rattlesnake is about questioning our
assumptions and beliefs about the vipers and understanding that the loss of one
organism can alter entire ecosystems.
Blacklegged ticks (also called deer ticks) carry Lyme
disease. Cases of Lyme disease are on the rise in recent times,
causing scientists to ask why this disease is gaining strength. Previous studies
have proved that a decline in mammals that feed on mice, such as foxes, can be
linked to the recent increase in Lyme disease among humans. The University of
Maryland study showed that timber rattlesnakes, though not mammals, provide the
same tick removal service.
Although media, literature and certain cultural
beliefs construct a sinister picture of rattlesnakes, perhaps hard science can
help to overturn the vilification of this endangered species.
In early October, Doug Fraser, a Siena College
biology professor, who has studied timber rattlers for 30 years, gave an
educational talk at the Connecticut Audubon Center at Glastonbury. Fraser
enumerated habitat loss, roadkills and poaching as the three greatest threats to
the timber rattlesnake. Fraser also discussed the three-year reproduction cycle
of rattlesnake females as a major challenge to successful recovery of the snake.
In addition, Fraser pointed out that Glastonbury, The Nature
Conservancy and the state Department of Energy and Environmental
Protection have been successful in conserving 7 square miles of prime timber
rattlesnake foraging grounds in Glastonbury.
Land conservation programs stem the loss of timber
rattlesnake habitat, but we must protect these snakes when they show up in our
backyards. According to University of Maryland biologist Karen Lips, timber
rattlesnakes are "non-aggressive and rarely attack humans." With this in mind,
residents who come across one of the endangered timber rattlesnakes should not
kill it — just let it go its own way, eating mice and helping to reduce the
blacklegged tick population.
William Conway, 21, of Milford is a senior majoring
in environmental studies at Skidmore College.
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