Nerodia erythrogaster
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iPlain-bellied Water Snake | ||||||||||||||||
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Redbelly water snake
Nerodia erythrogaster erythrogaster |
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||
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Nerodia erythrogaster Forster, 1771 |
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Tropidonotus transversus |
The Plain-bellied Water Snake (Nerodia erythrogaster) is a common species of mostly aquatic, non-venomous, colubrid snake found in the United States.
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[edit] Range and habitat
This species ranges through much of the southeastern United States, from Illinois to Delaware in the north, and Texas to northern Florida in the south, but it is absent from the Florida peninsula and the higher elevations of the Appalachian Mountains. They are almost always found near a permanent water source, a lake, stream, pond or other slow moving body.
[edit] Description
Adults are 30-48 inches (76-122 cm) long. It gets its common name, because it has no patterning on its underside. Species can vary in color from brown, to grey, to olive green, with dark colored blotching down their back, and an underside that is yellow, brown, red or green.
[edit] Reproduction
This species bears live young (ovoviviparous), like other North American water snakes and Garter snakes. In North Carolina and Georgia, the Plain-bellied water snake breeds from April to June, and batches of 5-27 young are born in August to October.
[edit] Subspecies
There are six recognized subspecies of N. erythrogaster:
- Plainbelly Water Snake, Nerodia erythrogaster alta (Conant, 1963)
- Bogert's Water Snake, Nerodia erythrogaster bogerti (Conant, 1953)
- Redbelly Water Snake, Nerodia erythrogaster erythrogaster (Forster, 1771)
- Yellowbelly Water Snake, Nerodia erythrogaster flavigaster (Conant, 1949)
- Copperbelly Water Snake, Nerodia erythrogaster neglecta (Conant, 1949)
- Blotched Water Snake, Nerodia erythrogaster transversa (Hallowell, 1852)
[edit] References
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