Thank you for your obviously genuine concern. It is much appreciated, but not necessary – am thick skinned and broad shouldered.
There a number of things that happen with APS that I believe detract from what is otherwise a potentially excellent forum. A number of these seem to be ingrained and expected. I was endeavouring to address one when another cropped up followed by another. Little wonder it gets messy and you loose the message. So here are the three issues:
- Use of the Herp Help Forum for playing practical jokes = wind ups.
- Attacks on a person instead of keeping it to the information in their post.
- The potential hazards associated with an incorrect ID of a snake.
The first two I have discussed sufficiently already. I might just make the point that I have been known as a bit a prankster at times and I have no problem with the wind ups as such. My problem is with them when in the Herp Help Forum. Unfortunately I did not make that clear early enough and I apologise that this may have unnecessarily protracted the discussion. I think it would be a healthy thing for all members to see it and use it as a seriously in need of help section of APS – no crap allowed.
Longqi and Bushman referred to number 3. I know we don’t know why the individual (OP is it?) didn’t check back. So let’s just get past that and make the discussion general and any examples hypothetical.
First off let’s look at responses. I am bewildered and amazed by some of the responses to ID requests. Some people will say, well I don’t really know much about this group but it might be such and such. I don't have to much of an issue with that - it is a waste of time but at least they are up front. However, some of the responses with no qualification on the poster’s experience with that group are so far wrong it’s ridiculous. If you do not know you ars# from you elbow when it comes to ID of particular animals, why the hell are you posting? To get your stats up? It doesn’t help and it might hinder.
Where the ID involves a snake, the stakes go up in a quantum leap. If an elapid is misidentified as a harmless colubrid or boid, the potential for serious consequences is a reality. If the animal is trapped or stuck and poster believing it harmless, decides to free it, you can well imagine the likely outcome from a very stressed out elapid. We would all want to hope that someone was not silly enough to do that, but... I have also noted a number of posters giving the advice to leave it alone where any doubt exists, which is great. So unless you really know your stuff on snake ID, you should stay out of it!
Those requesting an ID do need to wait for a consensus, as pointed out by Saximus. However, I did see a thread that had at least four posters say Keelback, all as joke, but as Bushman clearly pointed out, it’s no laughing matter. I will say that I have never seen anyone advise the person to google the species to check. I would also point out, that with some species, a visual comparison is not enough. For example, using one mentioned earlier, I would not expect a lizard person to be able to distinguish between a Keelback and a Rough Scaled Snake even with Google pictures.
Members who start posts should also end them. People have put in time and effort to help you out, the least you can do is return a bit of that by letting people know the outcome. Manners, etiquette, politeness, common decency, consideration… call it what you will – it should happen!
Last bitch for the evening – the amount of information given. Somewhere on the site there should be a list of the things to include when asking for an ID. I all but fall over at the appalling brevity of most. Top of the list should be an exact location, even if it is the same as your location specified on your posts. A number of times the location has been different and the poster neglected to say so. What the snake was doing and what sort of terrain it was in, in detail. For example, "on the back fence" – what sort of fence was it? how high? how high was the snake? was it climbing over it or along it? and this before we get to describing the snake. Yes, I know – there is no substitute for decent in-focus photo. Anyway, enough said.
Blue