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Carol Rollins | all galleries >> Animal Life >> Wildlife > Checkered Gartersnake
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19-JUL-2008 ©2008 Carol L. Breton

Checkered Gartersnake

Whitewater Draw Wildlife Area

As I was gingerly walking along at sunrise looking for wonderful things to shoot, I almost stepped on this beauty.

"DESCRIPTION: A medium-sized (up to 1,088 mm or 43" in total length) light olive-green, tan, or yellow-green snake with a pale stripe down the middle of the back. An additional light stripe runs
along each lower side on the third scale row (counting up from the belly). The dark areas between the stripes are marked by rows of dark, alternating, rectangular blotches that give the snake a
checkerboard appearance. the dark blotches often intrude into the mid-dorsal stripe. The head is plain olive gray and the neck is marked with two large, dark-edged, olive gray blotches. A white
crescent shape extends up from the neck onto each side of the head just in front of the neck blotches. Each eye is sandwiched between two vertical, white bars with black edges. The underside
is light cream, yellow, or gray. The pupils are round and the dorsal scales are keeled.

DISTRIBUTION: This snake is found across the valleys of southeastern Arizona. It also follows agriculture and riparian corridors into portions of south central Arizona around Casa Grande,
Phoenix, Fort McDowell, Buckeye, and Gila Bend. A population that might be isolated occurs in agricultural areas south of Yuma along the Colorado River. In Arizona it ranges in elevation from sea level to over 5,000'.

HABITAT: Semidesert Grassland, Chihuahuan Desertscrub, Sonoran Desertscrub, and the lower reaches of Madrean Evergreen Woodland communities are home to this snake. It is a lowland species that
inhabits valleys, flatlands, and broad, low, riparian corridors. Although it is not restricted to areas with permanent water it seems to be most abundant in the vicinity of ponds, moist grasslands,
tanks, drainages, irrigated areas, and rivers.

BEHAVIOR: It can be active at any time of night or day when conditions are favorable. It hibernates during the cold months of late fall and winter. When captured it often expels a foul smelling musk from the cloaca.

DIET: This dietary generalist actively forages for frogs, toads, tadpoles, lizards, salamanders, snakes, small mammals, fish, and insects.

REPRODUCTION: Up to 35 young are born in spring or summer.

By Thomas C. Brennan"

This is a wonderful link to Arizona's Reptile Life: http://www.reptilesofaz.com/



Canon EOS 30D ,Canon EF 70-300mm f/4-5.6 IS USM
1/1250s f/8.0 at 225.0mm iso800 full exif

other sizes: small medium original auto
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Jean D03-Sep-2015 23:20
Excellent capture of this colorful garter snake, Carol. ~V
Sarah Rehfeldt05-Jun-2015 03:10
Excellent detail, really nice capture!
larose forest photos25-Sep-2013 02:23
Wow, that is simply stunning. I've never seen this beauty before. Superb shot. V
cits_4_pets13-Apr-2009 15:38
Love the lighting on the snake, great details and the tongue is great. Wonderful capture. v
Lamar Nix25-Feb-2009 15:56
Excellent image! You managed to bring out the snake's features from the complex background into which the snake wishes to blend. His eye and tongue are key visual features in this close in view. V
Len01-Sep-2008 01:28
Great capture-nice to see some different wildlife from other areas. V.
Jim Coffman21-Aug-2008 14:26
Outstanding work! V
Giancarlo Guzzardi29-Jul-2008 07:33
magnificent picture,
a beautiful collection of snakes
Sam Rua22-Jul-2008 02:18
Great find and a fantastic comp, Carol. Well done. V.
Neal Nye21-Jul-2008 11:25
You get the most amazing shots. Most people never see these at all, much less get such great picture of it. Terrific work!
mathilda williams20-Jul-2008 20:32
what a beauty! you did a great job capturing this one. voted
mathilda
Guest 20-Jul-2008 17:48
Excellent shot, Carol! He gave you the perfect pose with his tongue flicking.
Monte Dodge20-Jul-2008 16:25
NIce one!! vote
Ceya20-Jul-2008 16:01
A both beautiful and dangerous looking snake! You have captured it very well! V
Walter Otto Koenig20-Jul-2008 14:55
Wow, super sharp capture of this beautiful snake with its tongue out checking out its surroundings. Thanks also for the interesting information. "V"
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