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  2. Banded water snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banded_water_snake

    Adults of the banded water snake typically range from 56 to 107 cm (22 to 42 in) in total length, with a record size (in the Florida subspecies) of 159 cm (62.5 in) in total length. [10] It is typically gray, greenish-gray, or brown in color, with dark crossbanding. Many specimens are so dark in color that their patterning is barely discernible.

  3. Florida banded water snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida_banded_water_snake

    The Florida water snake differs from the southern water snake (N. f. fasciata) chiefly in the shape of the markings on the ventrals. In N. f.pictiventris , these markings consist of transverse blotches, many of them enclosing an oval white spot, whereas in N. f. fasciata , they are solid, squarish spots.

  4. Brown-banded water snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown-banded_Water_Snake

    The brown-banded water snake grows to a maximum total length (including tail) of 78 cm (31 inches). Dorsally, it is olive or gray-brown, with dark brown, black-edged crossbands, which narrow at the sides, and are usually confluent with the black crossbands of the belly. There is a large dark rhomboid on the nape.

  5. World Snake Day: Here are 10 slithery reptiles you might see ...

    www.aol.com/world-snake-day-10-slithery...

    Banded watersnake. Banded watersnakes are semiaquatic. Banded watersnakes, or Nerodia fasciata, are nonvenomous, semiaquatic snakes found from southwest Alabama to North Carolina, according to the ...

  6. Common watersnake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_watersnake

    As N. sipedon ages, the color darkens, and the pattern becomes obscure. Some individuals become almost completely black. The belly also varies in color. It can be white, yellow, or gray; usually, it also has reddish or black crescents. The common watersnake is nonvenomous and harmless to humans, but superficially resembles the venomous cottonmouth.

  7. Nerodia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nerodia

    Nerodia rhombifer, diamondback water snake, giving birth Nerodia species are viviparous , breeding in the spring and giving birth in the late summer or early fall. They are capable of having 90 or more young, but broods generally are much smaller.

  8. Queen snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_snake

    R. septemvittata is known by many common names, including the following: banded water snake, brown queen snake, diamond-back water snake, leather snake, moon snake, North American seven-banded snake, olive water snake, pale snake, queen water snake, seven-striped water snake, striped water snake, three-striped water snake, willow snake, and yellow-bellied snake.

  9. Coral snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coral_snake

    While any snake exhibiting the coral snake's color and/or banding pattern in the southeastern United States will almost certainly, in fact, be a coral snake, there are coral snakes in other parts of the world that are colored differently. [4] Coral snakes in the United States are most notable for their red, yellow/white, and black-colored banding.