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Old June 1, 2011   #10
tjg911
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: zone 5b northwest connecticut
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btw in case people are getting freaked out there is a simple way to id a venomous snake in AMERICA. all snakes with a triangular shaped head in the united states are venomous with the exception of the coral snake. to add to the difficulty of iding a coral snake there is a snake that looks exactly the same except the coloration bands are reversed.

Coral snakes are most notable for their red, yellow/white, and black colored banding. (However, several nonvenomous species have similar coloration, including the scarlet snake, genus Cemophora, some of the kingsnakes and milk snakes, genus Lampropeltis, and the shovelnose snakes, genus Chionactis.) In some regions, the order of the bands distinguishes between the non-venomous mimics and the venomous coral snakes, inspiring some folk rhymes — "Red on yellow, kill a fellow; "Red on black, friend of Jack"; and "Red into black, venom lack; red into yellow, kill a fellow." However, this reliably applies only to coral snakes native to North America: Micrurus fulvius (Eastern or common coral snake), Micrurus tener (Texas coral snake), and Micruroides euryxanthus (Arizona coral snake), found in the southern and western United States. Coral snakes found in other parts of the world can have distinctly different patterns, have red bands touching black bands, have only pink and blue banding, or have no banding at all.


good luck trying to remember this limerick if bitten!

tom
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