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This list of snakes of Florida includes all snakes in the U.S. state of Florida. Non-venomous ... List of fishes of Florida; List of invasive species in Florida;
The Florida crowned snake is a small, 7-9 inch (17-22 cm), slender snake that is tan, light brown or reddish brown in color. It has a brown-black head, chin, and parts of the neck. Some individuals have a pattern on the head of a pale band. The band marking may be absent in individuals from north-central Florida. It can also have a dark neck band.
The Florida cottonmouth (Agkistrodon conanti) is a species of venomous snake, a pit viper in the subfamily Crotalinae of the family Viperidae. The species is endemic to the United States, where it occurs in southern Georgia and the Florida peninsula in nearly every type of wetlands in the region, including brackish water and offshore islands ...
Like other scarlet snakes, the Florida scarlet snake is a secretive, burrowing species, preferring habitats of soft soils, often in open forested areas or developed agricultural land. It spends most of its time hidden, emerging to feed on small rodents and lizards , but it has a particular taste for reptile eggs , swallowing them whole or ...
The corridor is home to 60 species at risk of extinction such as the crested caracara, snail kite, Florida grasshopper sparrow, red-cockaded woodpecker, whooping crane, wood stork, West Indian manatee, Gulf sturgeon, Okaloosa darter, Florida sand skink, and eastern indigo snake. Many of these species such as the Florida black bear, Florida ...
Storeria victa, the Florida brown snake, is a species of nonvenomous snake in the family Colubridae. [3] It is endemic to Georgia and Florida in the United States. [4
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.
Rhineura floridana, known commonly as the Florida worm lizard, [4] graveyard snake, [5] or thunderworm, is a species of amphisbaenian in the family Rhineuridae. The species is the only extant member of the genus Rhineura , [ 6 ] [ 7 ] and is found primarily in Florida but has been recorded in Lanier County, Georgia . [ 1 ]