Plants and Animals Photo credit:
Terciopelo, an aggressive snake species responsible for most snakebite envenomations in the neotropics. Davinia Beneyto
El Niño is a climate phenomenon that warms up the Pacific Ocean around the equator. In the western U.S., that typically means torrential downpour; in Australia, that might mean bush fires. For the tropics, it’s associated with cycles of diseases – and now snakebites too. According to new work published in Science Advances, viper envenomation is far more prevalent in Costa Rica during both the hottest and coldest El Niño years.
Published on September 14, 2015 11:05