Why do most poisonous animals tend to be cold-blooded?

Yes OK Desmostylus, thank you for taking such a long-winded and unecessarilly confusing way of pointing out a typo. “prey’ in that sentence should of course be ‘predators.’

You could have saved us all a lot of time by simply pointing out in 5 words that there appeared to be a typo.

http://www.llu.edu/llu/grad/natsci/hayes/research-c-venom/

ag.arizona.edu/urbanipm/firstaid/answers.html

www.cs.utexas.edu/ftp/pub/inderjit/Data/ Text/NSFAll/FullDocs/awards_1992/awd_1992_13/a9213870.txt

It seems like an awful lot of authorities believe that snake venom serves a defensive purpose.

Isla do you actually have even one reference that says it doesn’t?

Um, no, I don’t think so. I’m still having trouble working out what the hell you’re arguing in this thread. Let’s do a quick recap:

So again, what’s the story? Was the first post a typo? Did you once again mean the exact opposite of what you actually typed? If so, which of your posts represents what you believe to be true?

[Moderator TIME OUT ]

Demostylus, Blake, and anyone else who thinks you can get personal in GQ.

You can’t. You won’t.

Tone it down NOW!

samclem. GQ moderator

I would say because:

  1. Warm blooded mammals don’t need to poison you, they just jump on you and eat you

  2. Cold blooded mammals can’t chase you down or sprint after you, so they poison you and wait for you to die.

Just my two cents…
D.

I must be warmblooded.That’s how I catch my prey…er how I greet females I like…