Mamushi

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Mamushi

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Serpentes
Family: Viperidae
Genus: Gloydius
Species:
G. blomhoffii
Binomial name
Gloydius blomhoffii
(H. Boie, 1826)
Synonyms
  • Trigonocephalus Blomhoffii
    H. Boie, 1826
  • Trigonocephalus [(Halys)] affinis
    Gray, 1849
  • Trigonocephalus [(Halys)] Blomhoffii
    — Gray, 1849
  • T[rigonocephalus]. Blomhoffii var. megaspilus
    Cope, 1860
  • Halys blomhoffii
    W. Peters, 1862
  • T[rigonocephalus]. blomhoffii
    Jan, 1963
  • Ancistrodon blomhoffii
    Boulenger, 1896
  • Agkistrodon blomhoffii ? affinis
    Stejneger, 1907
  • Ancistrodon halys blomhoffii
    — Ross Smith, 2019
  • Agkistrodon blomhoffii blomhoffii
    Sternfeld, 1916
  • A[ncistrodon]. blomhoffii blomhoffii
    F. Werner, 1922
  • Agkistrodon blomhoffii affinis
    — F. Werner, 1922
  • Ankistrodon halys blomhoffii
    — Pavloff, 1926
  • Agkistrodon halys blomhoffii
    — Mell, 1929
  • Agkistrodon halys affinis
    — Mell, 1929
  • Gloydius blomhoffii blomhoffii
    Hoge & Romano-Hoge, 1981
  • Agkistrodon affinis
    Gloyd & Conant, 1990[2]

Gloydius blomhoffii, commonly known as the mamushi,[3] Japanese moccasin, Japanese pit viper, Qichun snake, Salmusa or Japanese mamushi,[4] is a venomous pit viper species found in Japan. It was once considered to have 4 subspecies, but it is now considered monotypic.[5]

This species, along with the yamakagashi (Rhabdophis tigrinus) and the Okinawan habu (Protobothrops flavoviridis), are the most venomous snakes in Japan.[6] Every year, 2000–3000 people in Japan are bitten by a mamushi. Bitten victims typically require one week of treatment in a hospital. Severe bites require intensive care, and approximately 10 victims die annually.[7][8]

Etymology

The specific name, blomhoffii, is in honor of Jan Cock Blomhoff, who was director of the Dutch trading colony in Nagasaki, Japan from 1817 to 1824.[9]

Description

The average length of mature individuals is 45–81 cm (17+34-31+78 inches); the longest specimen ever recorded had a length of 91 cm (36 in).[3]

The body pattern consists of a pale gray, reddish-brown, or yellow-brown background, overlaid with a series of irregularly-shaped lateral blotches. These blotches are bordered with black and often have lighter centers. The head is dark brown or black, with beige or pale-gray sides.[3]

Sign warning for mamushi in Kyoto, Japan

Common names

The common name in English is mamushi,

Qichun
snake (七寸子) or soil snake/viper (土巴蛇、土蝮蛇、土夫蛇、土公蛇).

Geographic range

It is found in

type locality given is "Japan".[2]

Habitat

It occurs in a range of habitats, including

montane rock outcroppings.[3]

Diet

A mamushi lurking in a bush a little above ground-level, waiting to ambush passing prey

It is typically an

farmland due to the associated rodent populations.[3]

Venom

Characteristics

The venom of this species varies very little in Japan in terms of both its potency and its effects.[11] According to Yoshimitsu (2005), this species and the Okinawan habu (Protobothrops flavoviridis), another pit viper, are the most venomous snakes in Japan.[6] The venom's lethality as measured by LD50 in mice following intraperitoneal injection is in the range 0.3 mg/kg[12] to 1.22 mg/kg.[13] The venom mostly contains haemolytic toxins, but it also has two neurotoxins—an alpha-toxin that is a post-synaptic inhibitor and a beta-toxin that is a pre-synaptic inhibitor.[13] Because the beta-toxin acts pre-synaptically, its effects cannot be blocked or treated by anticholinesterases.[13] The venom contains an anticoagulant, mamushi L-amino-acid oxidase (M-LAO).[14] It also contains the peptide ablomin which is highly similar in amino acid sequence to that of the venom, helothermine, of the Mexican beaded lizard (Heloderma horridum).[15]

Treatments for envenomations

There is an effective antivenom manufactured in both Japan and China.

FOY (see, e.g. Camostat).[16] In common with many other venomous snakes, the mamushi is highly resistant to its own venom because of various neutralising factors present in its sera including phospholipase A2 (PLA2) inhibitors; these and other inhibitors are the target of antivenom development.[17]

Every year, 2000-3000 people in Japan are bitten by mamushi, severe bites require intensive care, and approximately 10 victims die.[7] There have been case reports of kidney failure,[18] visual disturbances,[19] palsy, and miscarriage in pregnant women.[20]

In one study in Japan, mamushi bite victims required a median duration of 7 days of hospital treatment followed by a median of 31 days of out-patient treatment; the time to achieve a full recovery was even longer, taking up to several months.[8] The treatment protocol involved incision of the wound for exclusion of the venom, and injection of mamushi antivenom.[8]

Taxonomy

This species is similar to the cottonmouths and copperheads (Agkistrodon sp.) of the Americas, and it was long considered part of the same group (see synonymy).[2]

References

  1. . Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  2. ^ (volume).
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ "Gloydius blomhoffii ". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 19 May 2007.
  6. ^
    ISSN 0385-6313
    .
  7. ^ .
  8. ^ .
  9. . (Gloydius blomhoffi, p. 28).
  10. . (Agkistrodon blomhoffi complex, pp. 273-309).
  11. ^ .
  12. .
  13. ^
    PMID 20297733. Archived from the original
    on 2013-09-05.
  14. .
  15. .
  16. ^ Watanabe H, Nagatake T, Matsumoto K, Sakamoto T, Rikitomi N, Hirano E (1992). "Effectiveness of protease inhibition in severe mamushi bite". Procs. XXXIV Annual Meetings of Japan Society of Tropical Medicine, 25–26 Nov 1992, Nagasaki, p.75. Preprint. Also published by same authors as Jpn J Trop Med Hyg, 21(1):39–92, 1993.
  17. ^ Motou K, Yoshida A, Hattori S, Ohno M (2003). "A trial of muscle necrosis prevention by T. flavoviridis venom". Kagoshima University Journal of Medicine 23: 15–24.
  18. ^ Otsuji Y, Irie Y, Ueda H, Yotsueda K, Kitahara T, Yokoyama K, Higashi Y (1978). "A case of acute renal failure caused by Mamushi (Agkistrodon halys) bite". Medical J Kagoshima Univ 30: 129–135. (in Japanese).
  19. PMID 12698017
    .
  20. .

Further reading

  • Boie H (1826). "Merkmale eineger japanischer Lurche ". Isis von Oken 19: 203–216. (Trigonocephalus blomhoffii, new species, pp. 214–215). (in German and Latin).

External links