Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Banded Water Snake

Nerodia fasciata fasciata

Description:

Banded watersnakes are mid-sized -- 24-48 in (61-106.7 cm) -– fairly heavy-bodied semi-aquatic snakes. Coloration is variable, with snakes ranging from light brown or reddish to black in ground-color with darker crossbands. Crossbands are larger on the middle of the back and narrower on the sides (unlike the bands of copperheads, Agkistrodon contortrix, which are hourglass-shaped). Crossbands may be obscured as the snake darkens with age, and some individuals appear uniformly dark. In addition to crossbands, there are squarish spots at the sides of the belly and a dark stripe from the eye to the angle of the jaw.

Habitat:

Range and Habitat: Banded watersnakes are found along the Coastal Plain of the US from southwest Alabama to North Carolina. In our region, this species is restricted to the Coastal Plain and is replaced by the closely-related Northern Watersnake (N. sipedon) in the Piedmont and mountains. Banded watersnakes can be found in nearly all freshwater habitats, including ponds, lakes, streams, rivers, wetlands, swamps, and marshes. This one was photographed at Phinizy Swamp Nature Park near Augusta (Richmond County), SC.

Notes:

Banded watersnakes are commonly seen in the vicinity of many aquatic habitats and are active both day and night. They may be seen basking on logs or branches overhanging the water or foraging in shallow water for fish and amphibians, their principal prey. Watersnakes are viviparous, giving birth to 15-20 young in late July or August.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

2 Comments

KenCheeks
KenCheeks 8 years ago

PucaK,

I agree with your comment. This snake was photographed at Phinizy Swamp Nature Park, which is the coastal plain region of Georgia. For their species list, Phinizy lists Banded Water Snake but not Northern Water Snake. Northern Water Snake is usually found in the mountains and piedmont of Georgia. Thanks for the comment. I do like to make sure that my postings are accurate. I will correct the posting.

PucaK
PucaK 8 years ago

It looks like the bands on the tail end of this snake are continuous, not broken/off-set.
Thinking that I had photographed a Northern Watersnake, I submitted a photograph to Living Alongside Wildlife. This is part of the response...
Nerodia sipedon has a rear pattern which is "off-set" or broken, not bands that continue, uninterrupted, on both sides...
http://www.livingalongsidewildlife.com/2...
This difference is also clear in the images at SREL:
Banded watersnake (Nerodia fasciata), http://srelherp.uga.edu/snakes/nerfas.ht...
Northern watersnake (Nerodia sipedon), http://srelherp.uga.edu/snakes/nersip.ht...

KenCheeks
Spotted by
KenCheeks

Augusta, Georgia, USA

Spotted on Nov 17, 2013
Submitted on Feb 8, 2015

Related Spottings

Banded Water Snake Plain-bellied water snake Diamondback Water Snake (Juvenile) Plain-bellied Watersnake

Nearby Spottings

Broad-winged Skipper Rose Mallow Pileated Woodpecker Ocola Skipper
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team