Banded Watersnake

Image of Banded Watersnake
Barry Mansell photo.

Scientific name: Nerodia fasciata fasciata

Description: Adults average from 24-42 inches (61-106.7 cm). The record is 60 inches (152.4 cm). Stout bodied snake with black, brown, or red crossbands (often bordered with black) across back. Crossbands may be obscured as snake darkens with age. Background color may be gray, yellow, tan, or reddish. Belly is light with squarish spots. Scales are keeled and there are 21-25 dorsal scale rows at midbody. The pupil is round. A dark stripe extends from the eye to the angle of the jaw. Juveniles have very clear crossbands (usually black) on pale background.

Image of juvenile banded water snakeJuvenile banded watersnake.
Kenneth L. Krysko photo.


Banded watersnake: Left to right: Top of the head (notice the large plate-like scales on the top of the head);
underside of the head (chin and throat).


Banded watersnake: Left to right: Side of the head; front (face view) of the head.

Range: In Florida, this subspecies is found in the panhandle. Its range extends up the coastal plain to North Carolina and west to southwest Alabama.

Habitat: The banded watersnake can be found in nearly all freshwater habitats, including ponds, lakes, streams, rivers, and marshes.

Comments: . When threatened, the banded watersnake will readily bite and exude a foul smelling musk. Active mainly at night, but may be found during the day sunning on banks or vegetation hanging over the water. Feeds on fish, frogs, salamanders, crayfish, and tadpoles. The banded watersnake bears live young. Mating occurs in spring and the 7.5-9.5 inch (19-24 cm) young are born in summer.

Comparison with other species: The brown watersnake (Nerodia taxispilota) has squarish dorsal blotches along its entire body. The midland water snake (Nerodia sipedon pleuralis) has fewer than 30 darker brown crossbands near the neck, which break up into alternating blotches further down the body, and the belly is yellowish marked with two rows of half moons. Since both are found around waterbodies, the harmless banded water snake is often confused with the venomous cottonmouth (Agkistrodon piscivorus conanti). Cottonmouths can easily be distinguished from watersnakes. The cottonmouth has a triangular shaped head and a vertical pupil. If the head is viewed from above, the eyes of cottonmouths cannot be seen while the eyes of watersnakes are visible; cottonmouths have elliptical pupils and watersnakes have round pupils; and cottonmouths have a facial pit between the nostril and the eye, which the watersnakes lack.


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