Exceptional 3-Fanged Death Adder Could Be The Most Dangerous Of Its Species Ever Seen

0
3KB

Exceptional 3-Fanged Death Adder Could Be The Most Dangerous Of Its Species Ever Seen

Exceptional 3-Fanged Death Adder Could Be The Most Dangerous Of Its Species Ever Seen

All the better to bite you with.

Eleanor Higgs headshot
The mouth of a death adder is held open so two fangs on on side of the snake's mouth can be seen.

"All three fangs seem to function perfectly normally and all produce venom."

Image credit: Australian Reptile Park

The common death adder (Acanthophis antarcticus) already has quite a fearsome reputation as one of the most venomous land snakes found in Australia. And what is more dangerous than a death adder with two fangs ready to strike? Well, a death adder with three of course!

Keepers at the Australian Reptile Park made the unusual discovery and reported that the snake has a fully functional third fang on the left side of its mouth. This also means that the snake is producing a large venom yield, which is contributing to the antivenom program. 

“Snakes naturally shed their fangs regularly but rarely do they stick around, and even more rarely do they actually produce venom like this one does,” Operations Manager Billy Collett told IFLScience. “We don’t know what has caused this and we don’t have the facilities here to do proper testing, but our best guess is a rare mutation.”

Death adders are known to have one of the fastest strikes of any snake in the world and can attack their prey of frogs, lizards, and birds in a mind-boggling 0.15 seconds. For any humans unlucky enough to be bitten, the venom can cause paralysis, respiratory issues and, in extreme cases, death. With a third fully functioning fang, the team think this could be the most dangerous death adder ever recorded. 

“This is something we’ve never seen before,” said Collett in a statement sent to IFLScience. “We’ve had this death adder in the venom program for about seven years, but only recently did we notice the third fang. I thought it would just shed off over time, but one year later, and it’s still there!”

The antivenom program at the Australian Reptile Park sees the team “milking” five of the most dangerous snakes in Australia, including death adders, taipans, brown snakes, tiger snakes, and black snakes, all for the process of making antivenom


ARTICLE POSTED IN


nature-icon

More Nature Stories

clock-icon9 hours ago

comments icon1

clock-icon10 hours ago

clock-iconYesterday

comments icon31

Rechercher
Catégories
Lire la suite
Music
Kirk Hammett Names the Metallica Album With His Best Guitarwork
'Those Solos Wrote Themselves!' - Kirk Hammett Names the Metallica Album With His Best...
Par Test Blogger4 2025-06-01 14:00:04 0 2KB
Autre
Examining the Increasing Report Demand in the Voice Assistant Market
  The Voice Assistant Market report demand illustrates the accelerating global appetite for...
Par Sssd Ddssa 2025-11-06 04:17:36 0 457
Food
What Happened To Costco's Kirkland Signature Cola?
What Happened To Costco's Kirkland Signature Cola?...
Par Test Blogger1 2025-10-25 19:00:09 0 550
Jeux
Eriksholm The Stolen Dream review - a stealth game just like any other
Eriksholm The Stolen Dream review - a stealth game just like any other As an Amazon Associate,...
Par Test Blogger6 2025-07-14 14:00:14 0 2KB
Jeux
Hades 2 Hecate boss guide
Hades 2 Hecate boss guide How do you beat Hecate in Hades 2? As the saying goes, it's time...
Par Test Blogger6 2025-09-25 17:00:13 0 868