Dear reader,
Instead of debuting my planned new content for this month, I wanted to take a moment to thank you for your readership, to review the several milestones reached by Life is Short but Snakes are Long in 2015, and to outline where it's headed in the future.
The back cover of the paperback edition of Harry Greene's opus Snakes: The Evolution of Mystery in Nature, bearing the review by eminent nature writer David Quammen from which this blog takes its name |
Countries and regions from which readers have accessed Life is Short From what I can see on this tiny map, we're missing only Svalbard, Western Sahara, Turkmenistan, and North Korea |
- National Geographic (twice!)
- Scientific American
- BBC Earth
- Discover Magazine
- The Conversation/Huffington Post
- Biodiversity Heritage Library
- Small Pond Science
- Access Utah on Utah Public Radio
- Logan Herald-Journal
- Salt Lake City Tribune
- Utah State Today
- The Sierra Club
- The Other Herpcast
- Center for Snake Conservation
- Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation
- North Carolina Herpetological Society
- HerpDigest
I also found out that one of my posts was nominated for a ‘Best Science Writing Online 2013’ contest (although it did not win). Because of the blog, I've also been asked to provide review services on snake biology to Bones on Fox TV, The Blacklist on NBC, and the children's book publisher Cherry Lake Publishing. Finally, I was invited to travel to San Antonio, Texas, in May for the International Herpetological Symposium to speak at their Science Café and also in their general program about Life is Short but Snakes are Long, which I really enjoyed. I want to thank the many editors, writers, scientists, publicists, and reporters who thought my writing was good enough to republish or pay attention to in some form.
My Sonoran Coralsnake (Micruroides euryxanthus) |
Life is Short but Snakes are Long would not be possible without support from volunteer translators Alvaro Pemartin & Estefania Carrillo, from Utah State University, particularly my advisor Susannah French and the Ecology Center, and from my loving girlfriend and editor Kendal Morris.
Thank you, and happy 2016!
Thank you, and happy 2016!
Life is Short, but Snakes are Long by Andrew M. Durso is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Remember snakes have very poor vision,they act on heat detection, snake all snuggled in a space in your window shutters eating lizzarreds. Then someone site down and bam. Stabbed with snakebite, victim went into flee flight mode,once inside we saw the 2 fang marks had even gone through clothes,were so in disbelief and shock went to er, but they did not treat me and I almost died
ReplyDeleteActually snakes have fairly good vision, although boas, pythons, and pit vipers also use heat. As I wrote in response to your comment on my snakebite article, I'm very sorry you had such a bad experience, and I'm glad that you survived despite the obvious incompetence of the ER personnel you dealt with. It's true that many medical personnel are not properly trained when it comes to venomous snakebite.
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