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  2. Long-nosed snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-nosed_snake

    The long-nosed snake is distinguished by a long, slightly upturned snout, which is the origin of its common name. It is tricolor, vaguely resembling a coral snake, with black and red saddling on a yellow or cream-colored background. Cream-colored spots within the black saddles are a distinct characteristic of the long-nosed snake.

  3. Rhinocheilus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhinocheilus

    Rhinocheilus is a genus of snakes, commonly called the long-nosed snakes, in the family Colubridae. [1] The genus is native to the western United States and Mexico . Species and subspecies

  4. List of snakes of Arizona - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_snakes_of_Arizona

    Long-nosed snake (Rhinocheilus lecontei) Note: Often only black and white. Western ground snake (Sonora semiannulata) Note: Extremely variable appearance; Western hognose snake (Heterodon nasicus) Western milk snake (Lampropeltis gentilis) Western patch-nosed snake (Salvadora hexilepis) Western shovelnose snake (Sonora occipitalis) Western ...

  5. List of snakes by common name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_snakes_by_common_name

    Peninsula tiger snake; Tasmanian tiger snake; Western tiger snake; Tigre snake; Tree snake. Blanding's tree snake; Blunt-headed tree snake; Brown tree snake; Long-nosed tree snake; Many-banded tree snake; Northern tree snake; Trinket snake. Black-banded trinket snake; Twig snake. African twig snake; Twin Headed King Snake; Titanoboa

  6. Does SC or AZ have more venomous snakes and which ones ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/state-most-venomous-snakes-sc...

    Texas has the most snakes in the United States but if you want to talk about venomous snakes, you have to look to Arizona, which has — wait for it — 19 of the country’s 20 dangerous snakes.

  7. Rhinocheilus lecontei tessellatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhinocheilus_lecontei...

    The Texas long-nosed snake is a tricolor subspecies. Its color pattern consists of a cream-colored or white body, overlaid with black blotches, with red between the black. This color pattern gives it an appearance vaguely similar to that of a venomous coral snake, Micrurus tener or Micruroides euryxanthus. It has an elongated snout, to which ...

  8. Western hognose snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_hognose_snake

    Mexican hog-nosed snake Mexico from Tamaulipas and central San Luis Potosí, north and west along the Sierra Madre Occidental, entering the United States in the extreme southern Rio Grande Valley, the Trans-Pecos, southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona. H. n. nasicus: Baird & Girard, 1852 Plains hog-nosed snake

  9. Salvadora hexalepis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvadora_hexalepis

    At the end of the video, the snake feels threatened and strikes. Adults of Salvadora hexalepis are, on average, 20-46 inches (51–117 cm) in total length; [7] the record total length is 58 in (150 cm). [8] They have a distinctive, thick scale curved back over the top of the snout, and free at the edges. [8]