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  2. Pituophis melanoleucus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pituophis_melanoleucus

    Pituophis melanoleucus Stejneger & Barbour, 1917 [3] Pituophis melanoleucus, commonly known as the eastern pine snake, is a species of nonvenomous snake in the family Colubridae. The species is endemic to the eastern United States. Three subspecies are currently recognized as being valid.

  3. Pituophis melanoleucus mugitus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pituophis_melanoleucus_mugitus

    Barbour, 1921. Pituophis melanoleucus mugitus, commonly known as the Florida pinesnake or Florida pine snake, is a subspecies of nonvenomous snake in the family Colubridae. The species is endemic to the Coastal Plain of the southeastern United States. It is one of three subspecies of the species Pituophis melanoleucus.

  4. Wikipedia:Pituophis melanoleucus mugitus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Pituophis_mel...

    Barbour, 1921. Synonyms. Florida Pine Snake. Florida Pinesnake. Pituophis melanoleucus mugitus, commonly known as the Florida Pinesnake or Florida Pine Snake, is a species of nonvenomous snake in the family Colubridae. The species is endemic to the Coastal Plain of the southeastern United States. It is one of three subspecies of the species ...

  5. Pituophis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pituophis

    pine snake: P. m. lodingi Blanchard, 1924 – black pine snake; P. m. melanoleucus (Daudin, 1803) – northern pine snake; P. m. mugitus Barbour, 1921 – Florida pine snake; southeastern United States Pituophis ruthveni Stull, 1929: Louisiana pine snake: west-central Louisiana and East Texas Pituophis vertebralis (Blainville, 1835) Cape gopher ...

  6. List of snakes of Florida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_snakes_of_Florida

    Brown Watersnake. Florida Banded Watersnake. Red-Bellied Watersnake. Florida green water snake. Salt marsh snake. Mangrove salt marsh snake. Atlantic salt marsh snake.

  7. Pine woods snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine_Woods_Snake

    Rhadinaea flavilata. — Myers, 1974[2][3][4] The pine woods snake (Rhadinaea flavilata), also commonly known as the yellow-lipped snake or the brown-headed snake, [5] is a species of secretive colubrid found in scattered locations across the south-eastern United States. Rhadinaea flavilata is rear-fanged and mildly-venomous, but not dangerous ...

  8. Eastern indigo snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_indigo_snake

    The eastern indigo snake was first described by John Edwards Holbrook in 1842. For many years the genus Drymarchon was considered monotypic with one species, Drymarchon corais, with 12 subspecies, until the early 1990s when Drymarchon corais couperi was elevated to full species status according to the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, in their official names list.

  9. Southern black racer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_black_racer

    The southern black racer is a predator that relies on lizards, insects, moles, birds, eggs, small snakes, rodents, and frogs. Despite its specific name constrictor (scientific name: Coluber constrictor), the racer is more likely to suffocate or crush its victim into the ground, rather than coiling around it in typical constrictor fashion. [2]