Snake's Island (Ilha da Queimada Grande)
From Iguazu Falls to Lençóis Maranhenses National Park,
there are some breathtakingly beautiful places in Brazil. Ilha da Queimada
Grande, located about 90 miles off the São Paulo coast, seems like
another one of those beautiful places—at first glance. Almost every
Brazilian knows about the island, but most would never dream of going
there—it’s infested with between 2,000 and 4,000 golden lance head vipers, one of the deadliest snakes in the
entire world.
These vipers’ venom can kill a person in under an hour, and
numerous local legends tell of the horrible fates that
awaited those who wandered onto the shores of “Snake
Island.” Rumor has it a hapless fisherman landed onto the
island in search of bananas—only to be discovered days later in his boat,
dead in a pool of blood, with snake bites on his body. From 1909 to the
1920s, a few people did live on the island, in order to run its
lighthouse. But according to another local tale, the last lighthouse keeper,
along with his entire family, died when a cadre of snakes slithered into his
home through the windows.
Although some
claim the snakes were put on the island by pirates hoping to protect their
gold, in reality, the island’s dense population of snakes evolved over
thousands of years—without human intervention. Around 11,000 years ago, sea levels rose enough
to isolate Ilha da Queimada Grande
from mainland Brazil, causing the species of snakes that lived on the
island—thought to most likely be jararaca snakes—to evolve on a different path
than their mainland brethren.
The snakes that ended up stranded on Ilha da
Queimada Grande had no ground level predators, allowing them to reproduce
rapidly. Their only challenge:
they also had no ground level prey. To find food, the snakes slithered
upward, preying on migratory birds that visit the island seasonally during long flights. Often, snakes stalk
their prey, bite and wait for the venom to do its work before
tracking the prey down again. But the golden lancehead vipers can’t track the
birds they bite—so instead they evolved incredibly potent and efficient venom, three
to five times stronger than any mainland snake’s—capable of killing most prey
(and melting human flesh) almost instantly.
Because of the
danger, the Brazilian government strictly controls visits to Ilha da Queimada
Grande. Even without a government ban, though, Ilha da Queimada Grande probably
wouldn’t be a top tourist destination: the snakes on the island exist in such a
high concentration that some estimates claim that there’s one snake for every
square meter in some spots. A bite from a golden lancehead carries a seven
percent chance of death, and even with treatment, victims still have have
a three percent chance of dying. The snake’s venom can cause kidney failure, necrosis of
muscular tissue, brain hemorrhaging and intestinal bleeding.
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