The
research showed that the snakes seem to gain a sense of
well-being when they wriggle into sort of a group hug with other
rattlers, according to the study published this week the journal
Frontiers in Ethology. The findings challenge the notion that
reptiles are solitary hunters that display little in the way of
complex social behavior.
The study is the work of Chelsea Martin, a Loma Linda doctoral
student in biology, and her faculty adviser William Hayes, a
professor of earth and biological sciences.
Ethology, the study of animal behavior, has long recognized that
birds and mammals, including humans, find comfort from being
physically close to their own kind. Such proximity tends to make
reptiles more relaxed, lowers their heart rates and reduces
stress - not much different from people, Hayes said.
"Unfortunately for rattlesnakes and other lower vertebrates and
invertebrates, we seldom give them that credit," Hayes said.
"People are eager to just chop their heads off," Hayes said,
adding that "the animals are sentient, capable of emotions."
The idea for the study was hatched by Hayes in his off hours,
when he is often called upon to wrangle rattlers caught by
homeowners in the mountains of Southern California.
Hayes said he usually puts a captured snake in a bucket and
carries it safely into the wild, with the creature typically
rattling furiously all the way. But he said he noticed that when
two or more snakes were in a bucket, the rattling tended to
ease.
The calming effect when creatures are in close proximity with
their own kind is called social buffering.
"It tells us that when they are with another snake it reduces
their stress response," Martin said. "It has never been reported
in reptiles before. It's something that humans do."
To measure stress levels in the snakes, Martin used a heart-rate
monitor designed for humans.
"It lets us know as humans that, hey, we're not that different
from these snakes," Martin said. "They are doing something we
do."
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Frank McGurty
and Will Dunham)
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