Ladder snake
Ladder snake | |
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Species: | R. scalaris
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Binomial name | |
Rhinechis scalaris (Schinz, 1822)
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The ladder snake (Rhinechis scalaris) is a species of snake in the Colubridae family which is found in south western Europe.
Distribution
Portugal, Spain, southern France and just into Italy, also Menorca and the Iles d'Hyères off Provence, it is absent from northern Iberia including much of the Pyrenees, Galicia, Cantabria and the Basque Country[1]. The population on Menorca may stem from an introduction by humans.[2]
Habitat
This is a snake of scrub bushy cover, including orchards, vineyards, hedges and overgrown dry-stone walls and is common in the maquis. Habitats with stones and boulders and low shade are preferred. Although known from altitudes up to over 2,000m, this is a species which prefers altitudes from sea level to 700m.[1]
Description
The Ladder Snake is a medium-sized snake which reaches a maximum length of around 160cm but which averages 120cm.It has a pointed snout. As an adult the Ladder Snake is less variable than many related snake species, the basic colour goes from yellowish to dark brown, with two of darker stripes running down the length of the body from neck to tail. It normally also has a dark stripe running from the rear of the eye to the angle of the jaw and sometime subtle, darker markings on the sides. The ventral side is pale, varying from a silvery-grey to whitish, with the occasional dark spot. The eye is dark. The juvenile snakes have lighter and brighter colouration, varying from yellow to light brown, with the characteristic “ladder” pattern picked out in black along the upperside. The pale underside has black markings which sometimes coalesce to cover the whole of the underside. As the snake ages these colours and patterns fade until the simpler adult pattern is left.[1]
Food
The majority of the prey, is like other “rat snakes”, mammals such as mice, rabbits and shrews,making up 75% of prey items with a further quarter being spiders, insects (especially grasshoppers) and a few birds.To prey on birds the Ladder Snake will climb to search fort active nests in trees or on manmade structures. Lizards are also eaten. Juveniles prefer small lizards, baby rodents and spiders and grasshoppers.[1]
Behaviour
It is normally a active by day, but during the hottest summer months it may be nocturnal, while in the spring months it may be more crepuscular. Its behaviour is said to be more like that of a whipsnake rather than that of a rat snake. It is aggressive and defensive than most of the species formerly classified alongside it in the genus ‘’’’ Elaphe’’’’. Defensive signals include hissing, lunging forward with the mouth open and any attempts to pick one up may be greeted by sharp bites and also the emptying of the cloacal glandsreleasing on offensive odour.[1]
It is a more mobile snake than many of its relatives and movements of up to 100m per day have been recorded, while the average home territory of an individual is 4,500m2. Adults may enter in search of rodent prey but does not normally use such places for shelter and prefers rodent burrows, piles of stones or hollow trees.[1]
Breeding
In Iberia courtship occurs during May and June, however some females do not breed every year. Copulation lasts around an hour and a clutch with an average size of 15 eggs (varies between 4 and 24 eggs) is laid 3-6 weeks after mating. Incubation takes between 5 and 12 weeks. The young measure 20cm long as hatchlings. Unusually for snakes, their mother may remain with the newly hatched juveniles for a few days. Males reach sexual maturity when they reach a length of 50cm, females 65cm, which is at around 5 years old.[1]
Taxonomy
The Ladder Snake was formerly placed in the large genus Elaphe, with the other snakes generally known as "rat snakes", but Utiger et al 2002 placed the species in the monotypic genus Rhinechis[2].
Conservation Status
Least concern, this is a generally abundant species which is tolerant of a wide range of habitats and has a large geographic range.[2]
Gallery
References
- ^ a b c d e f g http://www.wildsideholidays.com/natural/reptiles-and-amphibians/314-ladder-snake-elaphe-rhinechis-scalaris-culebra-de-escalera-.html
- ^ a b c Pleguezuelos, J., Sá-Sousa, P., Pérez-Mellado, V., Marquez, R., Cheylan, M. & Corti, C. 2005. Rhinechis scalaris. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 28 July 2007.