Over-the-counter remedy snags snakes. (Strong Medicine).Acetaminophen acetaminophen (əsēt'əmĭn`əfĭn), an analgesic and fever-reducing medicine similar in effect to aspirin. It is an active ingredient in many over-the-counter medicines, including Tylenol and Midol. has a powerful reputation for vanquishing pain. Wildlife-control specialists now report that the drag, the active ingredient in Tylenol and various other painkillers, can also relieve a longtime headache on Guam--brown tree snakes. Since this marauder MARAUDER. One who, while employed in the army as a soldier, commits a larceny or robbery in the neighborhood of the camp, or while wandering away from the army. Merl. Repert. h.t. appeared on the island in the 1940s, the population density of the mildly venomous venomous secreting poison; poisonous. reptile has mushroomed to between 13,000 and 26,000 per square mile. Growing to more than 6 feet, a brown tree snake brown tree snake see boigairregularis. can swallow lizards, rabbits, puppies, piglets, and endangered birds. Several have even taken a bite out of a baby. Prowling prowl v. prowled, prowl·ing, prowls v.tr. To roam through stealthily, as in search of prey or plunder: prowled the alleys of the city after dark. v.intr. overhead power lines, members of the species, Boiga irregularis, occasionally short-circuit wires and cause local blackouts. Because the snake lacks natural predators on Guam, the only long-term control strategy is targeted poisoning, according to scientists at the Agriculture Department's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service in Fort Collins, Colo. In an upcoming issue of Environmental Science and Technology, they report that acetaminophen offers the most promising pesticide for the job. In tests, John J. Johnston and his colleagues gave 30 caged snakes dead, newborn mice with two 40-milligram acetaminophen tablets packed inside. Though nearly every snake took the bait, he says, they obviously didn't like the taste. One-third quickly regurgitated the treated mouse. But no matter. Each snake that swallowed the bait, even temporarily, died within 3 days. All 15 snakes given mice baited with acetaminophen-free tablets survived the test. This drug "is amazingly effective," Johnston says. In light of its performance in preliminary tests, the Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and had already granted the Agriculture Department temporary "emergency" approval to use acetaminophen as a pesticide solely against brown tree snakes on Guam. Now, the department is working toward more permanent approval, says Johnston. The scientists also tested the effect of acetaminophen on potentially threatened scavengers, including crabs. As they reported at a conference on Guam last year, those data and past toxicology studies suggest that crabs, birds, rodents, and cats face little risk from the baits. In sum, the scientists say the benefits of the newly launched poisoning program against the snakes "appear to outweigh the negligible risks to feral or other nontarget non·tar·get adj. Not being the target, as of an agent or weapon: effects of radiotherapy on nontarget cells. wildlife." |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion