4.4 • 4.9K Ratings
🗓️ 26 August 2022
⏱️ 35 minutes
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Field trip time! Today we’re learning all about snakes while out on a search for timber rattlesnakes in New York with state wildlife biologist Lisa Pipino. Some of the questions we tackle: How do some snakes make venom? Why are some snakes venomous and others are not? Why do rattlesnakes have a rattle? How do snakes slither on the ground without legs? Why don’t snakes have legs? Why don’t snakes have ears? How do they smell with their tongues? Why do some snakes use heat vision? Do snakes sleep? Why do snakes stick out their tongues so much?
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Snakes are ectothermic - meaning they are cold-blooded and rely on their environment to regulate their body temperature. Snakes like to bask on warm rocks to stay warm.
A rattlesnake’s first rattle segment is called a button. They shed their skin once or twice per year and each time they do, they get a new rattle segment.
Rattle segments sit on top of each other, and when rattlesnakes shake their tail, the segments rattle. This noise is a warning to predators to stay away.
Some snakes lay eggs. Others develop eggs that grow and hatch inside their body, meaning the snakes give birth to live young. Rattlesnakes give birth to live young but only stay with their babies for about a week. Those babies follow their mother’s scent trail back to the den for winter.
Some snakes are venomous, but not poisonous. What’s the difference?! Venom is delivered through a bite or a stinger, while poison is usually inhaled, swallowed, or absorbed through the skin. Snake venom is a lot like saliva, except it’s toxic. Snakes create it using a special gland. They then use their venom to immobilize or kill their prey before they eat it. They sometimes use their venomous bite as a defense as well.
Snakes do have nostrils and can smell through their nose a little bit. But they mostly use their tongues to smell and sense their environment. They stick out their tongues to pick up scents. And then they rub their tongues on a special organ at the top of their mouths, which sends a message about the scent to their brains.
Timber rattlesnakes live in the Eastern US and are different from some of the other well-known rattlesnakes in the Western US. In much of the northeastern states they’re considered threatened or endangered. People shouldn’t try to look for these snakes because of the possibility of disturbing the snakes or their habitats.
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0:00.0 | But why? A podcast for curious kids is known for serious answers to silly questions sent |
0:07.0 | in by kids just like you. But did you know that but why is now a book series? |
0:12.9 | Our first book, Our Lama's Ticklish, answers questions from real kids about farm animals. |
0:18.8 | This colorfully illustrated book is perfect for kids ages 8 to 10. And our second book, |
0:24.4 | To Fish Breathe Underwater, explores the underwater world of the ocean. Learn more at But Why Kids.org slash books. |
0:54.4 | This is But Why, a podcast for curious kids from Vermont Public. I'm Jane Lenton. On this show, |
1:05.0 | you send us the questions and melody, bow, debt, and I go find answers. Today, we got to get out of the studio |
1:11.2 | and actually go in search of not just answers, but in search of actual snakes. That's right. |
1:19.2 | Today we're doing an episode all about snakes. You have sent us a lot of snake questions. And a few |
1:24.9 | of your questions were about one specific kind of snake that a lot of people are curious about. |
1:31.4 | Rattle snakes. Depending on where you live, you might have rattlesnakes around in your own |
1:36.6 | neighborhood. Here in the Northeast, where we're based, there are only a very few populations of |
1:42.5 | timber rattlesnakes. So we decided to meet up with one of the scientists who studies them. |
1:47.7 | So my name is Lisa Papino. I work for the New York State DEC as a biologist and specifically, |
1:54.4 | I work with reptile and amphibians. We met up with Lisa on a very hot day in August in New York State. |
2:01.2 | I can only tell you to a certain extent where we are because we're talking about rattlesnakes and we |
2:06.9 | really want to keep these down embossing locations protected and which means we don't want people |
2:12.2 | really to be coming and visiting them. And we're in, I'll say, we're in Sullivan County in New York, |
2:18.2 | which is an area in the Hudson Valley, the southeastern part of the state. |
2:24.5 | Why do you need to keep rattlesnake dens secret? Are people too excited about rattlesnakes or do |
2:33.0 | people hurt rattlesnakes? Sure, it's a little bit of both. There are a lot of people who are very |
2:38.6 | afraid of snakes, especially venomous species. So it's possible someone could come out here and |
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