Yesterday morning as the Weasel and I were making our plan play out to get on track to intersect the batch of turkeys we had seen, we were hiking up a grassy hill and stopped to catch our breath. At my feet was an unfamiliar looking critter….Wapiti…You can stop reading right now and click off of this posting. The rest is not meant for your eyes. A large space is being left below for you to realize “YOU DON’T WANT TO KNOW THE REST OF THIS”! I have warned you.
Ok, so on with the story.
It was a slippery looking olive colored snake, about 18 inches long. I had to look really close to even see its head. The head was almost undetectable. The morning air was still quite cool and the snake just laid there not moving. In all my days afield I have never seen a snake that looked like this one. Was it poisonous? I didn’t know, but then I really don’t like snakes anyway, whether they are poisonous or not. I stepped around the little critter as we went on our way, I didn’t think it wise to step over it.
So all the rest of the day I was pondering that little slick skinned snake. I could not see scales on it like most snakes have. Was it native to our area of Utah? Poisonous? Should I have killed it? Should I have tried to capture it for the authorities to study? Well, whatever, I left it alone and went on. It’s still up there somewhere.
This morning I looked up “Smooth green snake in Utah”…this is what I found:
Read more: Smooth Green Snake Information | eHow http://www.ehow.com/about_6548419_smooth-green-snake-information.html#ixzz2TZEpjKHL
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Identification
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Smooth green snakes display bright green dorsal coloration, and have a cream- or yellow-colored underside. Some smooth green snakes are tan in color, and juveniles can be gray, brown or olive in color. These slender snakes have smooth scales and narrow heads, and typically measure around 1 to 2 feet in length. Smooth green snakes lose their yellow pigment after death, which turns the snake’s body blue.
Geography
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Smooth green snakes are found in North America, primarily in the New England and mid-Atlantic states of the U.S. Their range extends down into Ohio and Virginia, and along the Great Lakes in Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana and Minnesota. They can also be found in isolated patches of New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Missouri, Montana, Iowa, Nebraska and North and South Dakota.
In Canada, smooth green snakes are found in the southern parts of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Ontario and Quebec, and in the Maritime provinces.
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Habitat
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The habitat of the smooth green snake varies. They can be found in open grassy areas like parks, lawns and vacant lots, fields, marshes, savanna, open woodlands, scrubland and drainage ditches. These snakes prefer to spend their time on the ground, but will climb into brush or low-hanging branches if they need to. Smooth green snakes hibernate underground in burrows, abandoned anthills and beneath rotting wood.
Food Chain
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Smooth green snakes feed mostly on small terrestrial insects and spiders. Their diet includes caterpillars, moths, grasshoppers, crickets, slugs and millipedes. They have also been known to consume crayfish and snails.
Smooth green snakes are preyed upon primarily by birds–including birds of prey and brown thrashers–small mammals and even other snakes.
Behavior
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Smooth green snakes are primarily diurnal, and are active from April or May to early autumn. Smooth green snakes typically mate during early spring and will lay their eggs in mid summer. A female can lay between three and 18 eggs, depending on the snake’s age and the region in which the eggs are laid. Most clutches contain between four and nine eggs which are laid in crevices under rocks and logs or in burrows, according to the Montana Field Guide to smooth green snakes.
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I would like the smooth green snakes to be all blue. That would be nice.
Wapiti
Blue as in they lose the yellow pigment when they die?
Now you got it.