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Venom

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About 1 pages (129 words)
Venom Summary

Poison secreted by an animal, produced by specialized glands often associated with spines, teeth, or stings. It may be primarily for paralyzing or killing prey or may be purely defensive.

Some venoms also function as digestive fluids. Their effects can range from localized skin inflammation to almost immediate death; they include nervous-system excitation (cramps, vomiting, convulsions) or depression (paralysis, respiratory or cardiac depression or arrest), hemorrhage, red-blood-cell breakdown, circulatory collapse, and allergic reactions (including hives and inflammation). Many major groups of animals contain venomous species: snakes (cobras, mambas, vipers, pit vipers); fish (stingrays, spiny sharks, certain catfish, puffers); lizards (Gila monsters, beaded lizards); scorpions; spiders (black widow spiders, brown recluse spiders); social insects (bees, wasps, some ants); and marine invertebrates (sea anemones, fire corals, jellyfish, sea urchins). &Seealso; antidote.

This is the complete article, containing 129 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page).

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    Any toxin (such as the venom of certain species of snakes and spiders) produced by an animal.... more

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    Venom from Encyclopedia Brittanica. ©2009 Encyclopedia Brittanica. All rights reserved.

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