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Northern Pacific Rattle Snake

Crotalus oreganus oreganus

Description:

Appearance A heavy-bodied, venomous pit viper, with a thin neck and a large triangular head. Pupils are elliptical. Scales are keeled. Usually with a light stripe extending diagonally from behind the eye to the corner of the mouth. The ground color is variable, matching the environment - olive-green, gray, brown, golden, reddish brown, yellowish, or tan. Dorsal blotches on the front 2/3 of the body, change to dark bars on the body and dark and light rings on the tail which are well-defined and of uniform width. Young have a bright yellow tail. The underside is pale, sometimes weakly mottled. Dark brown or black blotched markings, usually with dark edges and light borders, mark the back, with corresponding blotches on the sides. This pattern is brighter on juveniles than on adults. A rattle, consisting of loose interlocking segments, usually occurs at the end of the tail. A new rattle segment is added each time the skin is shed. Newborn snakes do not have a rattle - just a single button which does not make a sound. Heat sensing pits on the sides of the head help the snake to locate prey by their warmth. Long, hollow, movable fangs connected to venom glands inject a very toxic venom which quickly immobilize prey. The snake can control the amount of venom injected and the fangs are replaced if broken. Bites on humans are potentially dangerous without immediate medical treatment. Even a dead snake can bite and inject venom if the jaws reflexively open when they are touched. Behavior Primarily nocturnal and crepuscular during periods of excessive daytime heat, but also active during daylight when the temperature is more moderate. Not active during cooler periods in Winter. In colder areas, known to den in burrows, caves, and rock crevices, sometimes in large numbers, and sometimes with other snake species. Prey is found while the snake is actively moving, or by ambush, where the snake waits near lizard or rodent trails, striking at and releasing passing prey. The snake then follows the trail of the envenomated animal and swallows it whole. When alarmed, a rattlesnake shakes its tail back and forth. The movement rubs the rattle segments together producing a buzzing sound which serves as a warning. Juveniles are born with only a silent button at the end of the tail. Diet Eats birds, lizards, snakes, frogs, insects, and small mammals, including mice, rats, rabbits, hares, and ground squirrels. (Adult California Ground Squirrels are immune to rattlesnake venom and will intensely confront any snake they feel to be a threat.) Reproduction Live-bearing; young are born August - October. Range This subspecies, Crotalus oreganus oreganus - Northern Pacific Rattlesnake, is found in California from Santa Barbara county, where it intergrades with the Southern Pacific Rattlesnake, east to the Sierras, and north from the coast to the Sierras and west of the Cascades ranges. Out of California it continues north through Oregon, west of the Cascades in Washington and into British Columbia, Canada, and east west-central Idaho. The species Crotalus oreganus - Western Rattlesnake, occurs from the Pacific Coast of northern Baja California north through most of California except the southern deserts, through Oregon and eastern Washington into British Columbia, Canada, and east into Nevada, Idaho, Utah, northern Arizona, extreme southwestern Wyoming, and extreme northwestern New Mexico.

Habitat:

Inhabits rocky hillsides, talus slopes and outcrops, rocky stream courses, rocky areas in grasslands, mixed woodlands, montane forests, pinyon juniper, sagebrush. Sea level to around 11,000 ft.

10 Comments

Hema  Shah
Hema Shah 11 years ago

Thanks Antonio! :)
Now with all the conservation efforts,the mountains are really coming alive with Lions ,coyotes,snakes etc!! Wonder how long we will be able to hike in such a carefree manner!

Hema  Shah
Hema Shah 11 years ago

Lisa, i am reading an abridges edition of " Rattlesnakes" by Laurence M. Klauber. I t is an excellent book and i recommend it to really gain an understanding on rattlers.It is an engaging account of rattle snakes and peoples reaction to them.
Klauber studied rattle snakes for at least 30 years and the book is dedicated to his wife who " endured a basement full of rattle snakes for more than 30 years!!"

AntónioGinjaGinja
AntónioGinjaGinja 11 years ago

:) you are courageous woman Emma,it's not the first time i tell you this :) my wife say you are wild woman :) she as afraid of non venon spiders and buggs(now less) :)

Hema  Shah
Hema Shah 11 years ago

thanks Kevin and Antonio!
Antonio, it is a great animal from far off!

KevinBBabbitt
KevinBBabbitt 11 years ago

very nice!

AntónioGinjaGinja
AntónioGinjaGinja 11 years ago

great animal :)

Hema  Shah
Hema Shah 11 years ago

Thank you so much Lisa!! I will update it now.

rutasandinas
rutasandinas 11 years ago

haha excelente historia genial:::lo importante saco la toma :::

Hema  Shah
Hema Shah 11 years ago

thanks, Harsuame!!. This is a rattle snake. Venomous!! I had to climb a hill to get past it. The hill was made of soft dirt . I grabbed a plant which gave way and i came sliding down the hill. Camera in one direction and me in the other! I probably looked like a nut! A dog was a watching me and walking forward. For a minute I thought he would step on the snake. Fortunately he saw the snake and instinctively moved back.

rutasandinas
rutasandinas 11 years ago

Nice!!

HemaShah
Spotted by
HemaShah

Tulare, California, USA

Spotted on Aug 1, 2012
Submitted on Aug 1, 2012

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