artículo científico
Promoting co-existence between humans and venomous snakes through increasing the herpetological knowledge base
Fecha
2021Autor
Malhotra, Anita
Wüster, Wolfgang
Owens, John Benjamin
Hodges, Cameron Wesley
Jesudasan, Allwin
Ch, Gnaneswar
Kartik, Ajay
Christopher, Peter
Louies, Jose
Naik, Hiral
Santra, Vishal
Kuttalam, Sourish Rajagopalan
Attre, Shaleen
Sasa Marín, Mahmood
Bravo Vega, Carlos
Murray, Kris A.
Institución
Resumen
Snakebite incidence at least partly depends on the biology of the snakes involved. However, studies of snake
biology have been largely neglected in favour of anthropic factors, with the exception of taxonomy, which has
been recognised for some decades to affect the design of antivenoms. Despite this, within-species venom variation
and the unpredictability of the correlation with antivenom cross-reactivity has continued to be problematic.
Meanwhile, other aspects of snake biology, including behaviour, spatial ecology and activity patterns,
distribution, and population demography, which can contribute to snakebite mitigation and prevention, remain
underfunded and understudied. Here, we review the literature relevant to these aspects of snakebite and illustrate
how demographic, spatial, and behavioural studies can improve our understanding of why snakebites occur
and provide evidence for prevention strategies. We identify the large gaps that remain to be filled and urge that,
in the future, data and relevant metadata be shared openly via public data repositories so that studies can be
properly replicated and data used in future meta-analyses.