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TM
CREEPY CRAWLIES ARE A REAL SCREAM
AT THE TENNESSEE AQUARIUM
Venom: Striking Beauties Exhibit
Runs Until January, 2002
"Oh my gosh!" a teenager screams as she spots a
hairy Goliath birdeater tarantula next to a giant Peruvian centipede, roommates
in sturdy steel tanks fit for a classic Houdini escape. Nearby, a woman shivers
as a menacing cottonmouth gapes from beneath a rickety shack in the lifelike
Cajun exhibit. Behind her, a man has just noticed the stonefish with its warty
camouflage and bulging eyes. "Look at the size of that mouth!" he
gasps, staring at what is widely considered the world's most venomous fish.
Want to be spooked? Then forget the monster masks and
killer costumes and head to the Tennessee Aquarium for a taste of the real
thing. Venom: Striking Beauties, the Aquarium's newest changing exhibit,
features some of the world's largest, deadliest and most exotic
creatures—nearly 50 different species in all.
Enter the vaulted, venomous chamber and be greeted by the
deceptively delicate lionfish, whose long, sharp spines cause intense pain,
swelling and even paralysis. Move on to a jewel box of blue, green and golden
poison-dart frogs, some standing sentry like tiny porcelain statues, others
hopping around like Mexican jumping beans. Observe long legged bullet ants –
they can deliver a sting 30 times more powerful than bees—as they parade in an
eerie march in their layered tunnels.
And, if you dare, come face to fang with some of the
world's most venomous snakes—the agile black mamba, aggressive death adder and
legendary green mamba. While you're here, watch the high-energy sea kraits whip
around in a frenzied underwater dance. Feel the hairs stand up on your arms as
the thick-bodied gaboon viper rouses from sleep and, lifting its arrow-shaped
head, bares a set of deadly two-inch fangs, the longest of any snake in the
world.
And there's more, including:
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The velvety-textured terciopelo, which has earned the
distinction of biting more people than any other snake in the jungles of
Latin America
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The beautiful eyelash viper, easily recognized by the
raised scales over its eyes and a tendency to lunge at its prey
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The Eastern coral snake, whose fatal bite can be
deceiving, causing only minimal pain and swelling—at first.
It's hard not to be scared by these things that go bump in
the night. Maybe it's the sheer size, or the prickly appearance, or all the
slithering, creeping and crawling. Perhaps it's because they lurk in burrows,
under rocks or beneath mushroom-shaped coral, waiting for their unsuspecting
prey. Or maybe it's the magic, mystery and folklore surrounding these lovely but
lethal oddities.
Don't worry, though—the black widow spiders, Gila
monsters and Emperor scorpions are locked up tight in the Venom gallery. A
number of precautions have been taken, from the use of industrial locks and
escape-proof surfaces to the purchase of powerful, and expensive, antidotes in
case of a bite. The exhibits are tightly sealed during visitor hours, and only a
limited number of herpetologists (snake experts) have access to the venomous
varmints.
Their killer reputations, however, are often undeserved. In
fact, says Dave Collins, the Aquarium's curator of forests, most venomous
animals would rather bluff than bite.
"Many of these creatures are nocturnal," Collins
points out. "They may attack if you surprise them but they are not out to
get you. The single most important thing to consider is that the animal did not
adapt venom as an offensive weapon. And most of them did not adapt it as a
defensive weapon. It serves two roles: to immobilize the prey without risking
injury to the feeding animal, and especially for snakes, to use as a
pre-digestive enzyme."
Venom: Striking Beauties will be on display at the
Tennessee Aquarium until January 2002. Admission is $11.95 per person and $6.50
per child, ages 3-12. For more information, call 1-800-262-0695.
Edited by Kerry Cohen
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