brown water snake | |
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Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Subphylum: | Vertebrata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Order: | Squamata |
Suborder: | Serpentes |
Family: | Colubridae |
Subfamily: | Natricinae |
Genus: | Nerodia |
Species: | N. taxispilota |
Binomial name | |
Nerodia taxispilota (Holbrook, 1842) |
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Synonyms | |
Tropidonotus taxispilotus Holbrook, 1842 |
The brown water snake (Nerodia taxispilota) is a large species of Natricine snake found in the southeast United States.
Lycodonomorphus rufulus is sometimes also called the brown water snake, but L. rufulus is found in South Africa.
Contents |
Brown water snake, water-pilot[1], aspic, false moccasin, great water snake, pied water snake, southern water snake, water rattle, water rattler.[2].
Found in lower coastal regions from southeastern Virginia, through the Carolinas and Georgia, to Northern and western Florida (Gulf Coast), then west through Alabama and Mississippi, to Louisiana, normally from sea level to 500 ft. (150 m) elevation.[3]
The brown water snake is very heavy-bodied, and its neck is distinctly narrower than its head. Dorsally it is brown or rusty brown with a row of about 25 black or dark brown square blotches down its back. Smaller similar blotches alternate on the sides. Ventrally it is yellow heavily marked with black or dark brown[4]. Dorsal scales are in 27-33 rows (more than any other North American water snake), and it has 2-4 anterior temporals (usually 1 in others)[5]. Adults measure 30-60 in. (76-152 cm) in total length; record 69 in. (175 cm)[6].
It is found in swamps and streams and is often mistaken for a venomous snake.
Nerodia taxispilota is ovoviviparous. Mating takes place in the spring on land or on tree branches. On average adult females are larger than adult males. The young are born alive, usually in August, in broods of 14-58, more commonly 30-40. The newborns are 7-10¾ in. (18-27 cm) long, with males longer than females, opposite of adults.[7]
Holbrook, J.E. 1842. North American Herpetology; or, a Description of the Reptiles Inhabiting the United States, Vol. IV. Dobson. Philadelphia. Plate VIII & pp. 35-36.