Yes I am critical of that statement that he commonly makes about the Box Jellyfish..Do you want to see my evidence? Shall I post the studies? He is imo biased towards Australian animals and not very credible.
Funny thing is...that's all you really need. Common sense tells you if someone is continuously claiming that a particular animal is the "worlds most venomous animal" and then you read studies on stings cause by said animal and they don't cause even half the severity of symptoms that many snakes do...well it is obvious that he is way off and wrong. He is purposely hyping up their reputation/ and deadliness of the Jelly... like some Australians do for their other venomous animals and snakes..Unfortunately, the studies don't match the exaggerated claims.
mmafan, since you have chosen not to answer my question, we have to assume that Wally76 is right.
A PoohD candidate?
Well mmafan
One day drop over there and play with a taipan while standing beside a top end river???
That way you can report on two things with a bit more insight than you obviously have at the moment??
I have been lucky enough to play with lots of vens through mainly stupidity and bravado
Exactly which Asian Land based snakes do you want to claim are more venomous than the Inland Taipan??
More dangerous yes; I will completely agree with that bit and so will anyone else
This is fair because I dont live in Australia either
I actually live in Asia and can even toss you a few conefish if all else fails
Yes I am critical of that statement that he commonly makes about the Box Jellyfish..Do you want to see my evidence? Shall I post the studies? He is imo biased towards Australian animals and not very credible.
Mmafan555,
I have a few points on toxicity to make….
The reason for this has yet to be investigated in Australia but overseas they found subtle variations in the chemical make up of the toxins between members of the same species. This may explain it – only time will tell. Unfortunately I cannot tell how that is taken into account in selecting the venom sample to be tested for the LD50. All I emphasise is that this is not a significant factor with nearly all the snake species evaluated.
Secondly, you are correct that a quite a number of venomous Asian, African and American snakes have not been assessed in terms of the LD 50. However, quite a large number have been assessed, including all those known or suspected to be responsible for fatal bites. These include the Indian Cobra, King Cobra, Eastern and Western Diamondback Rattlesnakes, Common Krait, Russel’s Pit Viper, Saw-scaled Viper, Egyptian Cobra, Puff adder, Beaked Sea Snake, Golden Lance head, Fer-de-Lance, Black Mamba, Bushmaster, Forest Cobra, South American Rattlesnake, Mexican West Coast Rattlesnake and many more. The only real hole in this is the sea snakes. They have yet to assess a lot of the species which many consider are probably highly toxic. This is a long-winded way of saying that there are none longer those gaps. All known highly venomous snakes have been assessed thanks to places like Instituto Butantan, a huge venom-research facility in Sao Paulo, South America.
Thirdly, I believe the LD50 is of some use in drawing conclusions about relative toxicities of venoms on humans. Researchers have investigated the clinical signs and intensity developed in severely envenomated individuals bitten by an identified species. This has been compared with other species, including the LD50.
While it leaves a lot to be desired as an accurate predictor, there is a rough correlation. Certainly enough to predict that the venom from an Inland Taipan would likely have catastrophic effects, beyond those of other species, on a severely envenomated individual.
Blue
It was a great decision on my part not to debate this with you mmafan, you are an agrumentative creature aren't you? Now you are comparing a local damage with fatal impact .... how does LD50 figure in that?
I am still watching this thread and looking for your answer to Blue's last question (the box-jelly one) you avoided to comment on.
By the way, species names are in lower case.
Now you are comparing a local damage with fatal impact .... how does LD50 figure in that?
Way to quote something I never said... When did I ever compare the ld50 with local damage....Nice misquote bro...I never said anything of the sort and I clearly outlined that overal lethality/toxicity/ld50 inb mice and local damage have little/nothing to do with each other. Just like the ld50 in mice has little/nothing to do with the ld50 for any other animal.
And the Box Jellyfish isn't even close to being the most lethally venomous animal...Not even remotely close and it isn't even remotely close to causing the most local damage either. Their are a good 50 snakes that are more lethally venomus than the box jellyfish and many that also cause more local damage.
Seymours claims are absurd.
How do you know they are more venomous? What methods are you using/relying on to make that claim?
Completely ignoring this troll now, here is something of interest for you Blue and Gordo: PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases: Preclinical Evaluation of Caprylic Acid-Fractionated IgG Antivenom for the Treatment of Taipan (Oxyuranus scutellatus) Envenoming in Papua New Guinea
Aka im just butthurt that I can't win this debate so I will just give up now.
The Box Jelly is not even close to the "worlds most venomous animal" like seymour claims...He has poor credibility.
The Taipan is different...It is clearly extremely venomous and possibly even number 1 in drop for drop toxicity to humans...I just can't say for certain that it is number 1 for humans and neither can you or anyone else. So those type of claims are misleading.
Well based on the studies that I have read..Most Chironex stings barely even require hospilization...and nearly all the deaths have been young children.... I can certainly think of many snakes that cause much more severe symptoms in bites than a typical Chironex sting.
50 may be an exaggeration but their are certainly quite a few snakes from many continents that cause more severe symptoms in a typical bite than a chironex sting.
I will post the studies soon... It will take a little bit of time to find them...Then you can judge for yourself.
Who are the people making these claims?
But that is not what you said. You claimed that xxx amount of snakes are more lethally venomous than a box jelly, you said nothign about a typical bites/stings. You are moving the goal posts to suit yourself. That is why no one is taking you seriously.
You seem to be getting yourself mixed up and confused with the terms you love to use for your own gains, venomous, dangerous and deadly.
My God do you Aussies love to misquote... Seymour makes the quote routinely...Thats it. My comments refer to him and I didn't say he was stupid, he obviously isn't I said that his claim that the Box Jellyfish is the worlds most venomous animal is incorrect and leads me to question his credibility on the issue of venom. I didn't say it's safe to pet a box jellyfish or that I would go swimming in an area where they are in the summer...I said it's not the most venomous animal in the world... Period.
I was just giving a vague estimate... The box jellyfish causes stings about as severe as a typical pit viper bite. And then on extremely rare instances it can cause death in as little as 3 minutes( for a child)..but on average its about as severe as a pit viper and their are PLENTY of snakes more venomous than it.
No...I am saying that the studies that I have read on Chironex Stings indicate that it is in no way the most venomous animal and it is less venomous that a variety of different snakes.
This is pointless...Let me just post the studies and then we can compare them. You know what I will make a seperate thread about studies from bites of venomous animals and then we/you can compare them with each other.
Scott, Michael and Blue
Do not feed mmafan, he's nothing more than a troll looking to get a rise. If he could say anything that we didn't already know or anything with a bit of intelligence he would be worth talking to. But he doesn't and he can't.
I have a feeling he either has OCD or Asperger's syndrome.
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