When it comes to Australia, I can't answer you on many questions not
regarding venomous snakes and some Arachnids. That, on the other hand, has
been an interest since I was 8 yrs old...

/Nick



-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----
Från: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] För
Chuck Alexander
Skickat: den 26 juli 2005 07:07
Till: [email protected]
Ämne: Re: Snakes in Australia was: [VFB] Freshwater eels


Nick: Yeah, on the Croc Hunter show.. He shows all kinds of those snakes,
spiders etc, you just mentioned..... I understand that Australia is the ONLY
Continent to have ALL major weather climates too.. From Desert to
Iceland???? Is that correct??? I guess it is cause the North would be near
the Equator, and the South close to the South Pole right???? Chuck

Oh, and I could not believe that LONG fence.. What is it?? the Jack Rabbit
fence??? Or Dingo fence??? Is that what it is called????

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Niclas Runarsson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, July 25, 2005 10:47 AM
Subject: RE: Snakes in Australia was: [VFB] Freshwater eels


Australia is the home of many highly poisonous snakes. On the world's top-10
toxicity list you can find The Eastern Brown Snake, The Tiger Snake, The
Australian Black Snake, The Death Adder, The Coastal Taipan and The Inland
Taipan... and they are all Australian snakes. The Inland Taipan is the
world's most poisonous land snake... with the Eastern Brown Snake holding a
second place. But the Eastern Brown Snake is more common than the Inland
Taipan, which makes it more dangerous to man.

Sea snakes are even more poisonous than land snakes. I recall reading a
comparision that says 10 times as toxic as Rattlesnake venom for some of the
species... and out of ca 50 sea snake species, over 30 have been recorded
outside Australia. But they are not considered a major threat to man with
their short fangs and docile behaviour. Most sea snake accidents have
occured when they have been caught in nets.

Then as these weren't enough, the Australian spiders shouldn't be forgotten,
such as the 30+ species of Funnel-Web Spiders... and the Red Back Spider
(relative to the Black Widow)... and of course the scorpions. Then, one of
Australia's "living fossils" is the Platypus. It's a warm-blooded furry
animal with a beak like a duck and the ability to lay eggs... and is ALSO
known to have caused very painful envenomations with its venomous spurs.

Australia is (to say the least) an extreme continent...

/Nick



-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----
Från: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] För
Reuven Segal
Skickat: den 25 juli 2005 13:36
Till: [email protected]
Ämne: RE: Snakes in Australia was: [VFB] Freshwater eels


It is from what I understand......I believe the brown is the most poisonous.
Check out this website for a peek at the conditions I am forced to fish
under. It also has some great vids from new Zealand They also have great
patterns and are a great bunch of guys. If anyone comes down to Australia or
New Zealand, they give fantastic guided trips.

www.goulburnvlyflyfishing.com.au/

Reuven

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Behalf Of Chuck Alexander
Sent: Monday, 25 July 2005 3:41 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Snakes in Australia was: [VFB] Freshwater eels

Reuven: i saw an article, that says Australia has more poisonous snakes than
any continent in the world.. True???? Chuck


----- Original Message -----
From: "WadaWorks" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, July 24, 2005 10:27 AM
Subject: Snakes in Australia was: [VFB] Freshwater eels













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