iHerp Australia Issue 11 | Page 21

‘A fantastic ability to find entry points.’ 5. A stunning sky-blue Common Tree Snake (Dendrelaphis punctulata) that climbed into a home through an open window near some overhanging branches. 6. Mum and the kids certainly got a shock to find this Carpet Python (M. spilota) hanging out in the playset in the children’s bedroom. 7. Two male Carpet Pythons engaging in ritual combat inside a client’s ceiling space, a common sight during the spring mating season. 5. 6. 7. difficult but an important part of our job. Blurry photos of tails can only tell you so much, and rather than have a client disturb the animal for further photos, we often Recent heavy rain and flash flooding in the region means arrive on site with very little idea of what to expect. that animals are on the move, including plenty of reptiles, and we've been busy with wandering creatures all day and On this occasion, after passing a security gate we are night. directed by guards to the warehouse where staff are waiting. Having been there before, we exchanged The work is complicated by the fact that many local snake pleasantries as I got my snake hook and bag from the car. species can be nocturnal, small, and brownish in colour; From the relative darkness outside, we enter the fluores- ranging from harmless neonate Carpet Pythons (Morelia cent glow of warehouse lighting and cross the workshop spilota) to juvenile Eastern Brown Snakes (Pseudonaja floor, winding past the stacks of equipment and storage textilis), the latter being obviously dangerously venomous. containers. Forklifts and figures in high-visibility safety While the area does produce a fair number of venomous vests busy themselves around us, giving the bathroom in snake call-outs during summer, the last time I attended the corner a wide berth. There is a rolled-up towel this property for a ‘brown snake’, it turned out to be jammed against the bottom of the door to keep the snake nothing more than a Burton's Legless Lizard (Lialis inside. As usual, it takes a bit of slow, cautious searching - burtonis). The South-East Queensland region is home to lifting toilet rolls and cardboard boxes - before we find the over 30 species of snakes, from small fossorial ant-egg or culprit. It’s a juvenile Eastern Brown Snake, about 30cm lizard eaters to large, highly-venomous hunters and long. powerful constrictors. Many are extremely variable in colour and of medical significance, making identification While these smaller individuals are naturally slower to