NEW YORK - This setting might be cinematic, yet it recently occurred in one of the airports in NYC. According to officials, a snake was spotted onboard a United Airlines passenger plane connecting Tampa Bay, Florida, to Newark, New Jersey, on Monday. After the plane landed in Newark, airport personnel retrieved the non-venomous snake.

According to CNN, the United airline staff, after passengers "alerted" them to the existence of the snake, the staff "called the necessary authorities to require control of the matter." It's unknown when such a snake was discovered. At 1:15 p.m., United Flight 2038 landed safely at Newark Liberty International Airport. Employees from the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, along with the airport's wildlife operations personnel, hopped aboard the plane and immediately removed the snake, the Port Authority said in a statement to CBS News.

According to the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission Facebook post, the distinct kinds of garter snakes were commonly known as "garden" snakes. These reptiles are non-venomous because they are frequently seen in meadows that aid in pest management.

(Photo: Wild Horizons/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
A file photo of a black-necked garter snake.


Closer Glance of Garter Snakes

The garter snake (genus Thamnophis), commonly known as a grass snake, is one of roughly 35 species of nonvenomous North American serpent with a striped pattern like a garter: usually, one or three horizontal yellow to red stripes separated by checkered spots. 

Grass snakes were varieties with obscured or absent stripes. Some categories differ regarding the number of animals because garter snakes have only minor changes in scales but significant regional differences in coloring. They are the most prevalent snakes in several locations throughout Canada and Central America. Garter snakes are tiny to moderate in size (often less than about 100 cm (39 inches) long) and completely harmless, according to Britannica.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) examined 31 garter snake species in 2020 and classed most of them as species of the least concern. Four garter snakes are considered endangered, according to the IUCN. As threatened species, T. Salinger of central Mexico and T. gigas of California's Central Valley, and T. T. and mendax melanogaster, both of which are endangered species in central Mexico, as the same report adds.

(Photo: United Airlines)
Airport and Port Authority officials responded to a United Airlines plane at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey when a snake was found on the floor in business class.

ALSO READ: Snake's Suicidal Struck: Can The Cold-Blooded Species Perform Suicide?

Unwelcoming Passenger: The Reason for Reptile Invasion 

It's not sure how the reptile got on the plane. A passenger likely carried it aboard. In the event this is the case, the snake may have gotten into a traveler's luggage sans their knowledge. Simple Flying has contacted United to inquire about the reason for the event; if a response is obtained, this post will be updated.

The presence of the snakes created enormous panic aboard the narrowbody airplane. The snake was later recognized as just a Garter Snake when removed. The name Garter Snake is often used to refer to around 35 identical snake kinds in North America, each of which is extremely tiny and poses little threat to people.

Considering their extensive prevalence throughout the globe, it is extremely rare for one to be close, much alone aboard, an airplane. Unless an initial announcement on the snake's origin is available, the riddle about how the snake onboard the plane will persist. What is understood was that the snake ventured farther than most Garter snakes do. It embarked on such an excursion that spanned the majority of the eastern shore in well under two hours, according to the analysis of Simple Flying.

Snake on Plane Sequels

Early this year, the Malaysian budget carrier reported on a Monday, Feb. 15, 2022, that an AirAsia passenger jet was compelled to detour and make an unplanned touchdown after a snake was observed crawling between the overhead lights.

The creature's outline could be seen slithering in the cabin's lighting fixtures in a TikTok viral video, which social media users quickly linked to Samuel L. Jackson's cult movie "Snakes on a Plane," stated a different report from CBS News.

The "extremely uncommon" occurrence occurred last week onboard a flight from Kuala Lumpur towards Tawau, on the eastern coast of Borneo island. When the flight captain realized the snake's presence, he bore "appropriate action" and dismounted in Kuching, 560 kilometers western locale of Tawau, so that the airliner could be fumigated.

A snake has also been observed aboard a passenger airliner before. A snake was discovered on a trip to Anchorage, Alaska, in 2017, while a brilliant green snake dropped from one of the baggage bins on an Aeromexico aircraft to Mexico City in 2016.

RELATED ARTICLE: Revenge of a Toddler: 2-Year-Old Bites Snake to Death After It Sunk Its Fangs to Her Lip

Check out more news and information on Snakes in Science Times.