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  2. California kingsnake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Kingsnake

    The California kingsnake is an oviparous internal fertilization animal, meaning it lays eggs, as opposed to giving live birth like some other snakes. Courtship for this kingsnake begins in the spring usually sometime after their hibernation or first shedding [ 2 ] and involves the males competing for available females.

  3. Taricha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taricha

    Taricha spp. eat a diet largely consisting of invertebrates, though adults will also take fish and amphibian eggs. [5] Most predators associate bright colors with poison (called aposematism ), so if attacked, the newt will take up a defensive position, showing off the bright underbelly. [ 6 ]

  4. Alameda whipsnake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alameda_whipsnake

    The Alameda whipsnake (Masticophis lateralis euryxanthus), also known as the Alameda striped racer, is a federally threatened subspecies of California whipsnake (M. lateralis). It is a colubrid snake distinguishable by its broad head, large eyes, black and orange coloring with a yellow stripe down each side, and slender neck. The California ...

  5. Milk snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk_snake

    They are also known to eat birds and their eggs, frogs, fish, and other snakes (including venomous species like coral snakes and rattlesnakes) and their eggs. [17] [18] Milk snakes are much more opportunistic eaters than the fox snake or corn snake. Although the diet of adult milk snakes primarily consists of rodents [9] (such as voles, mice ...

  6. California whipsnake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_whipsnake

    The California whipsnake, M. lateralis, has a range from Trinity County, California, west of the Sierra Nevada Mountains to northwestern Baja California, at altitudes between 0–2,250 metres (0–7,382 ft) and is known to use a wide variety of habitat types including the California coast and in the foothills, the chaparral of northern Baja, mixed deciduous and pine forests of the Sierra de ...

  7. Arroyo toad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arroyo_toad

    Eggs and larvae are susceptible to being preyed on by fish, other species of frogs (not excluding adult forms of the Arroyo toad), birds, snakes, and insects that inhabit the waters where the eggs and larvae are developing. [5] Adult arroyo toads are also vulnerable to predators such as American Bullfrogs and garter snakes.

  8. Massive pile of eggs found in python’s nest sets alarming ...

    www.aol.com/massive-pile-eggs-found-python...

    “She’s literally, like, still laying.”

  9. Rubber boa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_boa

    Rubber boas are the most northerly of all boa species. The distribution of rubber boas covers a large portion of the western United States, stretching from the Pacific Coast east to western Utah and Montana, as far south as central California, and as far north as southern British Columbia in Canada.