Southern Appalachia affords many opportunities to watch and learn more about our diverse species of wildlife. At my home near the border of Western North Carolina and East Tennessee, I see migrating and breeding birds, wild turkeys rearing poults, white-tailed deer with their fawns and the occasional black bear.

ย By far the most exhilarating sightings are of snakes. A couple of years ago, between mid-July and mid-August, I saw four rattlesnakes and one copperhead on my property. Last year in late June, two rattlers passed through in one day.

Since this is the year of the snake, Iโ€™m excited to see what thrilling glimpses of snakes the warm season may afford me. But not everyone shares my enthusiasm for elongated, limbless reptiles.

In Great Smoky Mountains National Park, โ€œvisitors are afraid of venomous snakesโ€ according to Bill Stiver, the parkโ€™s former supervisory wildlife biologist. He recalls being at a firearms training at the Mingus Mill range and โ€œhaving a visitor approach us and tell us how he shot and killed a rattlesnake up the trail.ย He seriously thought he was doing us and other visitors a favor.โ€

That individual had to pay a fine. It is illegal to kill timber rattlesnakes not only in the national park but in the entire state of Tennessee. Theyโ€™re also protected by the North Carolina Endangered Species Act.

During his tenure in the Smokies, Stiver was often called upon to remove venomous snakes from developed areas such as campgrounds, visitor centers, and mills. โ€œWe generally do not move them very far,โ€ he said, citing expert advice that โ€œif you move them out of their home range, there is a good chance they will die.โ€

Helping to educate and protect visitors near Cades Cove Visitor Center is park volunteer, certified master herpetologist, and venomous snake handler Walt Peterson.

โ€œCopperheads hang out around the millstones, and I tape off the area to keep the public safe, as people often sit on these stones,โ€ he said. โ€œThe snakes are a great source of interpretation, and it seems people are as eager to see them as the mill.โ€

Peterson said the most common question he hears is, โ€œIs it poisonous?โ€ This provides an opportunity to educate visitors: โ€œQuite simply, if you bite it and get sick, itโ€™s poisonous. If it bites you, and you get sick, itโ€™s venomous.โ€

He also hears โ€” and attempts to dispel โ€” a lot of โ€œsnake myths.โ€ One involves a common misconception that people have been โ€œchased by snakes.โ€

โ€œFrom a snakeโ€™s point of view, people look like very large predators,โ€ he said. โ€œSnakes will usually freeze, thinking you wonโ€™t see them, then slither away if possible. Sometimes that escape route is behind you, giving the impression that they are chasing you.โ€

University of North Carolina Asheville professor R. Graham Reynolds has made a career of studying reptiles, even discovering some new snake species in tropical climates. He said our regionโ€™s timber rattlesnake and eastern copperhead are both pit vipers, closely related members of the same family, Viperidae.

โ€œThey are ambush predators, which means they usually find a productive place to wait for their prey to come to them,โ€ Reynolds said. โ€œTimber rattlesnakes famously can stay put for quite some time โ€” hours to days โ€” waiting for a mouse to walk by. Mice are very warm relative to their environment, and the snake can detect this warmth using the pits in its snout to โ€˜seeโ€™ the infrared signature of the mouse.โ€

Copperheads, which are nocturnal and fantastically camouflaged, also have heat-sensing pits and eat warm-blooded mammals like mice and birds. Their diet includes amphibians like frogs as well as insects and other non-warm-blooded prey.

โ€œThe venom works to immobilize the prey quite quickly,โ€ Reynolds said. โ€œIt is dangerous to the snake to grab a mouse or a bird and risk being bitten or pecked. So, these snakes generally bite, release, then track down their envenomated prey.โ€

Snakes in our region need to move between habitats seasonally. Our cold winters require them to find locations where temperatures stay relatively stable without getting too cold. Once the season changes, they make short migrations to habitats where they can feed and reproduce.

โ€œOften these movements happen around the same time when the conditions change,โ€ Reynolds said. โ€œSo, you will sometimes observe several snakes in one day after not having seen any for a season. While snakes donโ€™t follow trails the way many mammals do, they sometimes move along the same areas as other snakes if there are few obstructions and enough places to hide if needed.โ€

And hiding is something at which snakes excel. Peterson said humans see only about 10 percent of the snakes that are around, and Reynolds has repeatedly witnessed hikers walking right past a snake on a trail. He adds that copperheads are quite good at living near humans, often without being detected, and most bites occur because a person was provoking or handling the snake.

In fact, recent scientific studies show that vipers in general are loathe to strike. A 2020 article titled โ€œDonโ€™t Tread on Meโ€ reveals the research of Adams et al. demonstrating that only two out of 69 copperheads attempted to bite when intentionally provoked. The paper cites herpetologist Clifford H. Pope, who wrote in 1958 that snakes are โ€œfirst cowards, then bluffers, and last of all, warriors.โ€

โ€œBoth our venomous snakes are very reluctant to strike people and will do so only when they feel trapped or otherwise threatened,โ€ said Reynolds. โ€œI have stepped over several copperheads, for example, and they just lie there.โ€

Between 2008 and 2015, an average of 201 people died in the United States each year as a result of animal encounters, according to a 2018 research paper by Forrester et al., with 34 deaths attributed to dogs and fewer than halfโ€”86 deathsโ€”to venomous animals. Insect stings were responsible for most of the deaths in this category at 71, with venomous snakes and lizards accounting for only six deaths. Snakebite victims often have underlying medical conditions or fail to seek treatment, Peterson said, and in 25 percent of snake bites, no venom is even injected.

โ€œThe biggest threat from timber rattlers and copperheads in the park comes from people unknowingly placing hands or feet too close, especially around buildings, rocks and logs,โ€ he said.

Why are snakes sometimes found near human dwellings and structures like the parkโ€™s visitor centers or my house in East Tennessee? Reynolds said itโ€™s often because that is simply where humans look.

โ€œYou might move a woodpile across your yard and discover a copperhead, but you probably do not move a woodpile out in the woods. It might also be said that humans are found close to snake dwellings, as sometimes the places that people like to liveโ€”sunny, south-facing slopes with creeks running nearbyโ€”are also preferred habitats of some snakes.โ€

Snakes exhibit preference for particular areas called โ€œhome ranges.โ€ So, they will often return if moved only a short distance. Only certified snake handlers such as those mentioned in this article can legally relocate venomous snakes. There are now social media groups that help people contact their nearest authorized snake handler.

Globally, the largest threat to snakes is, of course, humans, and a seemingly universal desire to destroy them based in a lack of education. Reynolds said this is leading to the likely extinction of multiple snake species.

โ€œSnakes can only defend themselves within a body length or two of themselves and will only do so when directly threatened,โ€ he said. โ€œSince it is within the powers of each person to decide what they value and what they donโ€™t value, we have the opportunity to reset how we interact with nature.โ€

Predators, snakes included, are important members of ecological webs that link living things together in communities. Disruptions like the killing of snakes ripple throughout the local biotic community, reducing overall biodiversity.

โ€œSnakes, like other misunderstood species, have a right to existence that goes beyond their utility to humans,โ€ said Reynolds. โ€œIf you donโ€™t love snakes, thatโ€™s okay; just give them their space. But perhaps you might find a spark of the joy and excitement that comes with seeing a wild snake, the way that I and so many thousands of other people in this region do.โ€

Frances Figart is the creative services director for the 29,000-member Smokies Life, a partner supporting Great Smoky Mountains National Park by providing educational products and services such as this column. For more information, visit SmokiesLife.org and reach the author at Frances@SmokiesLife.org to learn more and share tales of snake appreciation. An earlier version of this story appeared on The Smoky Mountain News website on Aug. 2, 2024.