Every summer,
the same folk wisdom resurfaces: triangular head, bad; round head, fine.
Vertical pupils, run; round pupils, relax. It’s tidy advice and it’s
dangerously unreliable. Herpetologists have been trying to kill this myth for
decades, because acting on it gets people bitten. Let’s look at what actually
separates the two major snake families involved in most human encounters, why
visual “rules” fail, and what to do if the guesswork runs out and a bite
happens anyway.
Two Families, One Confusing Overlap
Colubridae is the
largest snake family on Earth, making up roughly two-thirds of all known
species. Most colubrids – garter snakes, corn snakes, rat snakes, king snakes-
are harmless to people. But “most” isn’t “all.” A subset have rear fangs and
mild venom used to subdue small prey, and a few, like the boomslang and twig
snake of Africa, are genuinely dangerous despite belonging to a family
generally considered safe.
Viperidae – vipers, pit vipers, rattlesnakes, copperheads, cottonmouths – is a much smaller family, but nearly every member is medically significant. They deliver venom through long, hinged, hollow fangs that fold back against the roof of the mouth when not in use, allowing a much deeper, more efficient injection than a colubrid’s fixed rear fangs.
The Field “Rules” – and Why Each One Breaks
·
Triangular head: Pit
vipers do carry venom glands that widen the head behind the eyes. But plenty of
harmless water snakes flatten their heads defensively into the same shape, and
some genuinely dangerous elapids (coral snakes, cobras, mambas) have narrow,
unremarkable heads.
·
Elliptical “cat-eye” pupils: True for
most vipers. False as a safety test, because pythons, boas, and many
nightsnakes share the trait — and the highly venomous coral snake has round
pupils.
·
Heat-sensing pits: Only pit
vipers have these facial pits between eye and nostril, but you’d need to be
close enough to a snake’s face to see them, which is not a safe distance to be
standing.
·
Bright warning colors: Sometimes
an honest warning (coral snakes), sometimes pure mimicry by a harmless species
copying a dangerous one’s palette. Telling a coral snake from its scarlet
kingsnake lookalike by color alone is a genuine 50/50 gamble that regional
rhymes (‘red touch yellow’ vs. ‘red touch black’) only sometimes resolve,
because the rule flips between species and continents.
·
Rattle or tail behavior: A rattle
is a reliable rattlesnake tell, but its absence tells you nothing, since most
venomous species worldwide have no rattle at all.
The consistent
theme: every single visual shortcut has real exceptions, and the exceptions
vary by continent, because “venomous-looking” evolved independently, and
repeatedly, in unrelated lineages. Herpetological guidance on this point is
blunt, there is no universal rule, and any snake that cannot be positively
identified should be treated as if it could be dangerous.
What Actually Works: Regional
Knowledge, Not Global Rules
Identification
only becomes reliable when it’s narrowed to a specific place. In the eastern
United States, for instance, every native venomous species is a pit viper, so
head shape and pupil shape happen to correlate reasonably well with danger
locally, but the same logic fails completely in Australia, where the dangerous
snakes are round-pupiled elapids and the broad-headed, vertical-pupiled snakes
are usually harmless pythons. A field guide specific to your region (or a photo
sent to a local herpetology group or app) beats any rule of thumb you learned
once and carry everywhere.
The safest
working rule, endorsed across wildlife agencies: don’t identify, don’t handle.
If you can’t positively name the species from a safe distance, back away and
give it space, that single behavior prevents the overwhelming majority of
venomous bites, which happen when someone tries to move, catch, or kill a
snake.
Preventing a Bite in the First
Place
·
Stay on cleared trails; avoid tall
grass, leaf litter, and brush piles where snakes hide.
·
Wear boots and long pants in snake
habitat, and leather gloves when moving wood or debris.
·
Watch where you place hands and
feet when climbing over rocks or logs, never reach into a space you can’t see
into.
·
Snakes are most active at dawn,
dusk, and in warm weather; extra caution matters then.
·
If you see a snake, stop, back away
slowly, and give it a wide berth. Never attempt to touch, move, or kill it, a
large share of bites happen during exactly that kind of encounter.
If a Bite Happens: What Current Medical Guidance Says
This is the
part where outdated advice does real harm, so it’s worth being precise. The
Mayo Clinic, American Red Cross, and CDC now converge on the same
evidence-based protocol, and it directly contradicts a lot of old folklore.
Do
·
Call emergency services
immediately, don’t wait to see if symptoms appear.
·
Move well away from the snake; it
can strike again, and a recently killed snake can still reflexively bite.
·
Keep the person still and calm;
movement speeds venom circulation.
·
Remove rings, watches, and tight
clothing near the bite before swelling starts.
·
Wash the bite gently with soap and
water and cover it loosely with a clean, dry dressing.
·
Keep the bitten limb immobilized
and roughly at heart level.
·
If you can safely photograph the
snake from a distance, do it, helps clinicians select the right antivenom. Never attempt to catch or handle it.
·
Acetaminophen (Tylenol) is fine for
pain if needed.
Don’t
·
Don’t apply a tourniquet or a tight
constricting band, cutting off circulation concentrates venom and raises the
risk of losing the limb.
·
Don’t cut the wound or try to suck
out venom, by mouth or with a suction device, it doesn’t remove meaningful
venom and can worsen tissue damage and infection.
·
Don’t apply ice.
·
Don’t give the person caffeine or
alcohol.
·
Don’t give aspirin, ibuprofen, or
other NSAIDs, they increase bleeding risk, which matters because many venoms
already disrupt clotting.
·
Don’t drive yourself if you’re the
one bitten, dizziness or fainting can follow quickly.
In the United
States, 7,000–8,000 people are bitten by venomous snakes annually, and roughly
five die, a low fatality rate specifically because most people reach a hospital
and get antivenom in time. The bigger risk isn’t death; it’s permanent tissue
and nerve damage from a delayed or mishandled response, which is why prompt,
correct first aid matters even when the outcome is rarely fatal.
Worth
remembering, too: even a bite from a “harmless” colubrid isn’t nothing.
Non-venomous bites can still cause real puncture wounds, pain, and infection
risk, so basic wound care and a tetanus check are still worth a call to a
doctor.
Sources
·
Valkonen, J. et al. “Antipredatory
Function of Head Shape for Vipers and Their Mimics.” PLOS ONE, 2011. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3144867
·
Africa Check, interview with Johan
Marais, African Snakebite Institute. “No, Shape of Snake’s Head Doesn’t Show
Whether It’s Venomous or Not.” africacheck.org
·
“Fact Check: It’s Time to Bust (or
Confirm) These 7 Myths About NC’s Venomous Snakes,” featuring Jeffrey Beane, NC
Museum of Natural Sciences. aol.com
·
North Carolina Wildlife Resources
Commission. “Eastern Coral Snake” species profile. ncwildlife.gov
·
Hessel, M.M. & McAninch, S.A.
“Coral Snake Toxicity.” StatPearls, NCBI
Bookshelf (NIH), 2023. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK519031
This post is general science information, not medical advice, if you or someone with you is bitten by a snake, treat it as an emergency and call your local emergency number right away.
Source: Colubrids vs. Viperids: Why ‘Look for the Triangle Head’ Can Get You Bitten

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