LOS ANGELES, July 12, 2007

Animals Feel The Heat, Flee Their Habitats

Rising Mercury Drives Snakes, Deer, Coyotes Into Urban Areas

  • Play CBS Video Video Heat Drives Critters Crazy

    The heat wave isn't just getting to people, it's getting to some wild animals too, bringing them closer than usual to humans in a desperate search for food and water. Sandra Hughes reports.

  • The smallest member of the rabbit family, the pika dies when overheated.

    The smallest member of the rabbit family, the pika dies when overheated.  (CBS)

  • Photo Essay Animal Instincts

    Photos: Take a gander at some of our favorite critters.

  • Photo Essay Taking The Heat

    Western U.S. sizzles in record-breaking triple-digit temperatures.

(CBS)  Westerners have been sweating out record temperatures this summer. But they're not the only ones feeling the heat. From rattlesnakes to bears, creatures great and small are fleeing their natural habitats while the mercury soars. And, as CBS News correspondent Sandra Hughes reports, they're turning up in some pretty unlikely places.

Rattlesnakes — everywhere. More than Bo Slyapich has seen in his 20-year career as a snake wrangler. The prolonged drought and extreme heat have combined to drive the thirsty and venomous creatures too close for comfort – back decks, play equipment – anywhere they can find shade.

What do they want?

“Food. Just like you go to the supermarket to go shopping, they come to our homes to go shopping,” Slyapich says.

Not too far from the steps to homeowner Tom Mahan’s family pool, there was a four-foot rattlesnake.

He’s found them even sipping from his pool. Now he’s taken protective measures.

“Half-inch grid galvanized fencing around the three-acre perimeter here, which keeps 99 percent of any kind of snakes out,” Mahan said.

Deer and coyotes are coming down from the hills, too. A disoriented bear climbed up a utility pole in triple-digit heat.

“It is uncharted territory,” said Paul Edelman of the Santa Monica Mountain Conservatory. “It is the equivalent of the stories you see on the big droughts in the African Serengetti plains where the animals drop three feet in front of the water hole.”

In Utah, officials say the drought may have played a role in turning a black bear into a killer. It had to be euthanized after breaking into a family’s tent and dragging out a little boy.

Wildlife sightings used to be something reserved for trips to the zoo. But experts predict that global warming will bring more extreme droughts, putting more animals in danger.

High in the mountains the smallest member of the rabbit family is disappearing. The pika dies when overheated.

“Species that are on the top of mountains, they don't have anywhere else to go where are they going to go?” Dr. Terry Root of Stanford University said. “They're going to go extinct.”

Apparently the only one not rattled by the drought is the snake wrangler.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Add a Comment
by carlylaine July 13, 2007 1:00 PM EDT
OMG!!!! Global warming! I'm so scared! What will we do? Snakes or any creepy crawler or furrball have never sought shelter from the heat! We're doomed! WE'RE GOING TO DIE!!!!

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by gunshack1 July 13, 2007 12:21 PM EDT
Maybe the pikas are being eaten by the rattlesnakes. Anyway, we all know it's Bush's fault. ;-)
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by samthetvcat July 13, 2007 5:37 AM EDT
That's so true Erasmus - I let myself get lost in the funnies otherwise it's just too upsetting :(
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by erasmus6 July 13, 2007 3:08 AM EDT
It's funny (NOT) how animals always have to pay for our stupidity.
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by samthetvcat July 13, 2007 2:06 AM EDT
"They come to our homes to go shopping? Okay folks, tell me when you had a snake asking if you had a change for a $20 so it could buy some k00l-aid and bran cereal for its, um, "special problem"...

And snake as it is, it'd just try to steal anyway... "

"Where is Al when we need him? No, not Gore! Hitchcock, is who I mean."

tee hee hee! :D
Reply to this comment
by hypnotoad72 July 12, 2007 11:56 PM EDT
They come to our homes to go shopping? Okay folks, tell me when you had a snake asking if you had a change for a $20 so it could buy some k00l-aid and bran cereal for its, um, "special problem"...


And snake as it is, it'd just try to steal anyway...
Reply to this comment
by ringading3 July 12, 2007 11:40 PM EDT
And have you noticed the BIRDS lately? They seem to be traveling in larger groups and there is a lot of chatter. Where is Al when we need him? No, not Gore! Hitchcock, is who I mean.
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