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Snakes of the Mojave Desert

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Gopher Snake. Mojave Desert Sidewinder. Red Racer (Masticophis flagellum piceus) ... (Great Basin) Gopher Snake. Telltale Characteristics. Very keeled scales ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Snakes of the Mojave Desert


1
Snakes of the Mojave Desert
  • Pathfinder 2011

2
Species
  • Red Racer
  • Desert Rosy Boa
  • Mojave Rattlesnake
  • Gopher Snake
  • Mojave Desert Sidewinder

3
Red Racer (Masticophis flagellum piceus)
4
Distinguishing Characteristics
  • Have large scales above eyes
  • Very long
  • Some specimens have been as long as 8.5 feet
  • More commonly between 4 and 6 feet in length
  • Move very quickly
  • Color
  • Is most commonly Yellowish-Green (outside of
    California)
  • Can be Red, Gray, or be Striped
  • Often turn more reddish as they age

5
Up Close and Personal
6
Red Racer is their Pen-name
  • Yes, they are actually Red Coachwhips, but they
    are colloquially called Red Racers
  • Why coachwhip? Look at their tail!
  • But they move so fast you cant usually see it
    So Red Racer it is!

7
More Importantly, Will it Eat You?
  • No! The Red Racer is Non-Venemous
  • It is considered harmless to humans
  • However, you should not corner or attempt to
    handle this snake it is known to strike
    aggressively

8
If it is Non-Venemous, How Does it Hunt?
  • Relies on speed
  • Holds head high above ground
  • Prey is killed by force of strike or weight of
    the body
  • It does not, however, constrict its prey

9
What Does it Eat?
  • Small mammals
  • Birds
  • Bird Eggs
  • Lizards
  • Other Snakes
  • Frogs/Toads
  • Roadkill or Carrion

10
Habitat
  • Like to climb
  • Often found near rocks and small bushes
  • Inhabits burrows
  • Dislikes dense vegetation
  • Desert
  • Open grassland
  • Sagebrush
  • Sandy
  • Rocky
  • Thrives in drier environments

11
Range
12
Other Facts
  • Lays eggs at the end of spring
  • Eggs hatch in 50-65 days
  • Hatchlings are only a foot long at birth
  • Not currently endangered
  • Active During the Day

13
Desert Rosy Boa
14
Characteristics
  • Female is usually larger than the male
  • Have three stripes running down their length
  • One is dorsal
  • The other two are lateral
  • Stripes are dark (usually red) on a lighter
    (usually cream) background
  • Heavy-bodied
  • Usually not longer than 3 feet
  • Have a very small head
  • Smooth scales

15
How/What Does it Eat
  • It is a boa, so it constricts its prey
  • Non-venemous
  • Very passive snake
  • Generally does not strike (but dont take your
    chances)
  • Frequently kept as pets
  • Eats
  • Small Rodents
  • Small Birds
  • Amphibians
  • Lizards
  • Small Snakes

16
Behavior
  • Active at dawn and dusk and temperate nights
  • During very hot or cold months, stays underground
  • Ground dweller
  • Sometimes rolls into a ball and hides head when
    threatened

17
Habitat and Range
  • Arid and semi-arid shrublands
  • Rocky deserts
  • Canyons
  • Really likes rocks

18
Breeding
  • Give birth to live young!
  • Young are born from October to November

19
Mojave Rattlesnake
20
What to Look For
  • Usually 18-40 inches
  • Has a thick body with a thin neck and triangular
    head
  • Large scales on head
  • Greenish gray, tan, yellow, brown, or olive green
    (hence Mojave Greens)
  • Heat pits on sides of head
  • Elliptical pupils
  • Light stripe from eye to corner of mouth
  • Raised (keeled scales)

21
What to Look/Listen For if You Dont Want to Get
Bit
  • A short, thick snake
  • A distinctive black, diamond-shaped pattern on
    the snakes back
  • Listen Can you hear a loud, frightening sort of
    rattle?

22
How to Get Bitten
  • Walk silently through the underbrush
  • Chase/corner a mojave rattlesnake
  • Stick your arm/leg/body/head into dark burrows,
    caves, or holes (or anywhere you cant see)
  • Provoke a basking snake (poke it with a stick,
    etc.)
  • Walk around at night
  • Touch dead snakes (yes they still reflexively
    bite when dead!!!)

23
Are They Dangerous?
  • Yes.
  • Especially juveniles, as they are born without
    rattles (you cant hear them) and they usually
    inject more venom

24
Behavior/Hunting Technique
  • Primarily active at night
  • Uses highly developed heat-sensing pits help
    locate mammals
  • Hold rattle off ground when moving
  • Strike at prey and draw back
  • Follow prey by smell
  • Wait for venom to do its work
  • Can re-grow fangs if they break or are pulled out

25
That Said, What do They Eat?
  • Small mammals
  • Mice
  • Rats
  • Rabbits
  • Ground Squirrels
  • Occasionally
  • Toads
  • Lizards
  • Snakes

26
Habitat, Breeding, and Range
  • Grassland
  • Desert underbrush
  • Rocky slopes
  • Light chaparral
  • Bears live young from July to September

27
(Great Basin) Gopher Snake
28
Telltale Characteristics
  • Very keeled scales (rough)
  • 2.5-7 feet long
  • Most commonly under 5 feet
  • Large rostral scale on snout
  • Color
  • Cream
  • Black splotches down back
  • Smaller splotches along sides
  • Neck is pale in south and mottled in north

29
Behavior
  • Active all the time
  • Good at climbing, burrowing, and swimming
  • Will puff up/flatten its body to appear larger
    and shake tail (produces a rattling sound in dry
    vegetation)

30
Hunting
  • Constricts its prey
  • Hunts underground (in burrows, etc.)
  • Will squish prey against sides of burrow to kill
  • Eats
  • Small mammals
  • Likes pocket gophers
  • Birds
  • Bird Eggs
  • Lizards
  • Insects

31
Range and Reproduction
  • Breed in the spring
  • Lays eggs from June to August
  • Young hatch two to three months later

32
Mojave Desert Sidewinder
33
How to Distinguish From a Rattlesnake
  • It is a rattlesnake!
  • It has a horn-like scale over each eye
  • Keeled scales
  • Thick, short snake
  • Pits on the side of head for heat-sensing
  • Has a rattle
  • Distinctive sideways movement
  • Wide range of colors
  • Color is based off of snakes habitat
  • Dark blotches on back
  • Cream, tan, brown, pink, or gray

34
Venemous? Horned Scales?
  • Yes, this is a type of rattlesnake
  • The horns are thought to bend down to protect the
    eyes when the snake goes underground

35
Hunting, Behavior, and Movement
  • Ambushes prey by
  • Burying itself under loose sand
  • Only head is exposed
  • Near Kangaroo rat trails
  • Behaves like a rattlesnake
  • Moves by
  • Throws itself sideways
  • Uses curves in body to push itself
  • Leaves J-shaped imprints on the ground
  • Imprints are 45 degrees to direction of movement

36
Sidewinding
37
Diet, Habitat, and Range
  • Eats
  • Lizards when young
  • Increasing size of prey with snake -- up to small
    rodents (rats, ground squirrels)
  • Habitat
  • Really likes sandy areas with sparser vegetation

38
And Those, My Friends, Were the Mojave Desert
Snakes
  • Just Remember
  • Do not get bitten by a rattlesnake or the
    sidewinder
  • Watch where youre stepping (sidewinders bury
    themselves!)
  • When it comes to holes If you cant see whats
    in it, dont stick anything in it.
  • Respect their space and theyll respect you.
    Besides then youll live to tell a cool story!

39
If You Get Bitten
  • Stay Calm
  • Call for Help
  • Try Not to Move (Especially large muscle groups,
    ie. walking)
  • Try to Stop any Bleeding at Strike Point
  • Tourniquet the Limb (if you can)
  • Remember What the Snake Looked Like
  • Call 911 -- You Need the Anti-Venom
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