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The Great basin rattlesnake was first formally named by Laurence Monroe Klauber in 1930 as a subspecies of Crotalus confluentus (now known as Crotalus viridis). [5] It is commonly considered a subspecies of Crotalus oreganus. [6] [4] The type locality is "10 miles northwest of Abraham on the Road to Joy, Millard County, Utah." [1]
Timber rattlesnake, Crotalus horridus. This is a list of all sure genera, species and subspecies of the subfamily Crotalinae, [1] ... Great Basin rattlesnake;
Some researchers list this taxon as elevated to a full species as (Crotalus abyssus), [5] or as a subspecies of the Great Basin Rattlesnake (Crotalus lutosus) as Crotalus lutosus abyssus, in the Annotated Checklist of the Rattlesnakes (Second Edition), published in The Biology of Rattlesnakes II 2017. [11]
There are 20 species of dangerous snakes in the US and one state has ... Grand Canyon rattlesnake, desert massasauga, Great Basin rattlesnake, Hopi rattlesnake, Mojave rattlesnake, Mojave desert ...
As of July 2023, 44 [4] to 53 [5] species are recognized as valid. ... Great Basin rattlesnake Great Basin between the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada
Lighter Side. Medicare. News
Of the 6 venomous snake species native to N.C., 3 are rattlesnakes – pigmy, timber & Eastern diamondback. Each one is protected by the North Carolina Endangered Species Act.
Aruba rattlesnake; Chihuahuan ridge-nosed rattlesnake; Coronado Island rattlesnake; Durango rock rattlesnake; Dusky pigmy rattlesnake; Eastern diamondback rattlesnake; Grand Canyon rattlesnake; Great Basin rattlesnake; Hopi rattlesnake; Lance-headed rattlesnake; Long-tailed rattlesnake; Massasauga rattlesnake; Mexican green rattlesnake; Mexican ...