Not everyone likes snakes and that is okay. But even if we dislike them, we have to understand their role and how they are important to the ecosystem. And they are incredibly good for people (yes there are deadly ones out there, but the good drastically outweighs the bad!). Here is a post I wrote last year that delves just a little bit into how we rely on snakes, often without realizing:
I respond to our friend's comments, and I agree with your post, because the snake will not be in our mind if he is not in the gangu, because the act of humans who destroy their place of residence, which makes angry snakes against humans,
This mindset is what causes species to be poached and driven to extinction. Look at the rhino for example, people say that rhinos will kill you if you encounter them in the wild, or we need their ivory for medicine, and therefore use this as some sort of justification for killing them.
Not everyone likes snakes and that is okay. But even if we dislike them, we have to understand their role and how they are important to the ecosystem. And they are incredibly good for people (yes there are deadly ones out there, but the good drastically outweighs the bad!). Here is a post I wrote last year that delves just a little bit into how we rely on snakes, often without realizing:
https://steemit.com/science/@herpetologyguy/why-do-we-need-snakes
We can't let our fear or hatred for something blind us to the good it does.
I respond to our friend's comments, and I agree with your post, because the snake will not be in our mind if he is not in the gangu, because the act of humans who destroy their place of residence, which makes angry snakes against humans,
This mindset is what causes species to be poached and driven to extinction. Look at the rhino for example, people say that rhinos will kill you if you encounter them in the wild, or we need their ivory for medicine, and therefore use this as some sort of justification for killing them.