Two highly venomous snakes, housed in tiny tanks in a terraced house, are just two of the dangerous pets veteran reptile rescuer James Hennessy has been called to.
In Ireland, licences are not needed to keep animals like these so there is no way of know what is being kept, where they are being kept or how well they are secured or being looked after.
This particular pair, a gaboon viper and a puff adder, were discovered by a landlord after his tenant left the country and his animals.
The creatures were found in a small bedroom where their owner “had about a foot of space” between his bed and the “way too small” tanks that had not been cleaned in months.
Mr Hennessy said the animals were living “in about two inches of their own faeces”.
He describes gaboon vipers and puff adders as having “life-threatening venom” that could “kill fairly rapidly”.
The row of houses had adjoining attics, he added, and if they had escaped, “it wouldn’t have been just that person’s problem, it would have been everybody’s”.
Despite dogs needing to be licensed, in Ireland there is very little regulation around the ownership of dangerous animals by private individuals.
Mr Hennessy said the public would be “massively” surprised if they knew the variety and number of exotic animals kept in homes around the country.
In Northern Ireland, there is a list of types of animals, including venomous snakes, that must be licensed under the Dangerous Wild Animals (Northern Ireland) Order 2004 and are subject to annual inspections.
Records there show there are licences for 39 animals held by five different people.
They include two western diamondback rattlesnakes in Co Armagh and three squirrel monkeys in Co Antrim.
The rest are registered in Co Down, and along with three ring-tailed lemurs there are 31 venomous snakes.
Among the snakes are a king cobra, the world’s longest venomous snake; spectacled cobra, one of the “big four” species of snakes; and three monocled cobras.
If most of these were moved to the Republic of Ireland there would be no way of tracing where, or how, they are housed.
Mr Hennessy’s organisation, the National Reptile Zoo in Kilkenny, is home to several of the animals he has rescued or that have been surrendered by their owners.
Former pets there include green mamba snakes and an 8ft long boa constrictor, which if it started to constrict around a person’s neck, it wouldn’t “take a lot to close your airway off before you go unconscious”, said Mr Hennessy.
He has also been called out to properties where crocodiles were being kept.
He said most people do want to care for their animals but there is a lack of understanding and awareness of how to look after exotic pets.
He said often owners end up “killing them with kindness” leaving the animals in an extremely poor condition.
Other animals have been surrendered to his zoo because the owners cannot cope with the demands of an animal that grows large or lives for a long time.
Currently, in Ireland, licences are only needed for exotic animals if they are regulated under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (Cites).
Mr Hennessy describes the legislation as being about the “rareness of the animal” rather than any potential danger it may pose.
The attitude in Ireland, he said, is “if something hasn’t happened, up to now, it’s probably not going to happen”.
But adds there have been cases of people being admitted to hospital for venomous bites that have “gone under the radar a little bit”.
When asked if there are any plans to introduce a licensing system for dangerous exotic animals, the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine pointed to current rules around importation, saying: “Safeguards are in place to control their entry including prior approval, official veterinary certification and inspection at the Border Control Post.” – PA