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Tennessee's Watchable Wildlife

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REPTILES » SNAKES
Rough Earthsnake

Rough Earthsnake
Virginia striatula

This plain-looking snake occurs only in a few counties in the southwestern corner of the state, mostly around the city of Memphis.

Description: A small, keel-scaled snake (7.0 to 10.0 inches in length) which is gray, brown, or reddish- brown and has a pointed snout. Identity can be confirmed by 5 labial scales (upper lip) and loreal scales (in front of eyes) that are horizontal and touching the eye. Belly is cream-colored or light gray. Males have a longer tail than females. Young are darker and grayer, and have a light band across the back of their head.

Similar Species:

  • Smooth Earthsnake has smooth scales, small black flecks on the body, and 6 upper labial scales.
  • DeKay’s Brownsnake has dark spots on the back and no loreal scales.
  • Ring-necked Snake has a yellowish ring around neck and a bright yellow belly.
  • Eastern wormsnake has smooth scales and a sharply contrasting belly.

Habitat: Found in a variety of habitats including rocky hillsides, pine and hardwood forests, forest edges, and suburban and urban areas. Rough Earthsnakes are secretive, burrowers that spend most of their time under rocks, leaf litter, logs, or trash.

Diet: Primarily eats earthworms, but also slugs, snails, and soft-bodied insects and their larvae.

Breeding information: Courtship and mating occurs in April and May. Females are ovoviviparous (give live birth) and deliver 2-9 young during late summer or early fall.

Status in Tennessee: Range is very limited in Tennessee; appears to be fairly common in the Memphis area. Not considered threatened as these snakes have adapted to human environments in large cities.

Fun Facts:

  • These secretive snakes rarely venture above ground, but occasionally will surface after a cool, heavy rain.

Best places to see in Tennessee: Under cover of stones or woody debris in the Metropolitan area of Memphis

For more information:

Atlas of the Reptiles of Tennessee

The Snakes of Tennessee web site


Sources:

Conant, R. and Collins, J. 1998. Peterson Field Guides: Reptiles and Amphibians (Eastern/Central North America). Houghton Mifflin Company, New York. 616pp.

Jensen, J. B., Camp C. D., Gibbons, W., and Elliot, M. J. 2008. Amphibians and Reptiles of Georgia, University of Georgia Press, Athens, GA. 575pp.

Johnson, T.R. 2006. The Amphibians and Reptiles of Missouri. The Missouri Department of Conservation, Jefferson City, MO.



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