Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wisconsin status Picture Butler's garter snake: Thamnophis butleri: Least concern Special concern Common garter snake: Thamnophis sirtalis: Least concern Common Common watersnake: Nerodia sipedon: Least concern Common DeKay's brown snake: Storeria dekayi: Least concern Common Eastern foxsnake: Pantherophis vulpinus: Least concern Common Eastern ...
The American badger is the state animal of Wisconsin. This is a list of mammals native to the U.S. state of Wisconsin. [1] [2] The following tags are used to highlight each species' conservation status as assessed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature:
By 2009, the population recovered to 11,980 snakes, safely exceeding the population minimum goal of 5,555 adult snakes required by the 2003 recovery plan. Monitoring was to occur for 5 years following this delisting. The Lake Erie watersnake is just the 23rd species or subspecies to be removed from the list due to recovery. [33]
You can identify this critter by its dark brown or black color, while some have patterns of dark splotches. The juvenile snakes look a bit different than the adult ratsnakes, with blotches of dark ...
Some Kirtland's snakes that are spotted are photographed so the land trust can identify each individual snake by the unique scale pattern on its head. Some are tagged on the skin of the snake so ...
Like other natricine snakes such as water snakes (genus Nerodia) and garter snakes (genus Thamnophis), S. dekayi is a viviparous species, giving birth to live young. [13] Sexual maturity is reached at two to three years. Mating takes place in the spring, after snakes emerge from brumation. Between 3 and 41 young are born in late summer. [14]
The western worm snake is found in the United States in southern Iowa, southeastern Nebraska, eastern Kansas, western Illinois, Missouri, Louisiana, eastern Oklahoma, and northeastern Texas with isolated records from southwestern Wisconsin, southeastern Arkansas and middle Tennessee.
A Field Guide to the Snakes of the United States East of the Rocky Mountains. (Illustrations by Edmond Malnate). New York and London: D. Appleton-Century. Frontispiece map + 163 pp. + Plates A-C, 1–32. ("Storeria occipito-maculata", pp. 110–111 + Plate 21, Figure 61). Morris PA (1948). Boy's Book of Snakes: How to Recognize and Understand Them.