THE REPTILES
GARTER SNAKES. Genus Thamnophis42
Field characters.Body
long, slender and tapering; tail pointed; scales of back all ridged
(keeled), never in more than 23 rows. (See fig. 62b.) Coloration
of upper surface black or grayish, with a light line along each side of
body and another line down middle of back, or else many small light
spots on back; pattern never in large blotches or cross-bands; under
surface bluish green. Emit a foul-smelling liquid when
handled.
Occurrence.Common along
streams, about margins of ponds, and in wet meadows throughout the
Yosemite region up at least to 8600 feet altitude.42 Live on
damp ground and in water. Several individuals often found
together.
42The identification of
the species and subspecies of Garter Snakes is often a difficult matter
even for a trained herpetologist. There is much variation among
individuals, especially in the numbers of scales; consequently series of
specimens are usually required to properly identify the snakes from any
one locality. Difficulty may be experienced in attempting to name
certain individual specimens. The latest comprehensive study of the
Garter Snakes of western North America is that by Van Denburgh and
Slevin (Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci., ser. 4, vol. 8, 1918, pp. 181-270, pls.
7-17) who have identified our specimens from the Yosemite region as
belonging to two species, one of which is represented by three
subspecies. These forms, with their principal characters (as exhibited
by the most typical specimens), and the localities at which they were
found, are as follows:
PACIFIC GARTER SNAKE, Thamnophis
sirtalis infernalis (Blainville), has (usually) 7 scales on upper
lip (supralabials), not more than 19 lengthwise rows of scales on back,
and upper surface black with three distinct light stripes, one down
middle of back and another low on each side of body. It is a lowland
species, common at Snelling and Lagrange and ranging eastward as far as
floor of Yosemite Valley.
GIANT GARTER SNAKE, Thamnophis
ordinoides couchii (Kennicott), has usually 8 scales on upper lip,
usually 21 rows of scales on forepart of body, and upper surface of body
black but with no light line down middle of back, the upper surface
being marked with small scattered light spots. (See fig. 62b.) It
is a central California race, found on meadows in Yosemite
Valley.
MOUNTAIN GARTER SNAKE, Thamnophis
ordinoides elegans (Baird and Girard), has (usually) 8 scales on
upper lip, not often more than 19 rows of scales on back, and a dark
body coloration with 3 distinct light stripes, one down middle of back
and one on each side of body. It is a high mountain subspecies, reported
from floor of Yosemite Valley, but more common in the higher altitudes
as at Merced Lake (7500 feet) and Tuolumne Meadows (8600
feet).
WANDERING GARTER SNAKE, Thamnophis
ordinoides vagrans (Baird and Girard), has (usually) 8 scales on
upper lip, 21 rows of scales on forepart of body, and a dull (often
grayish or greenish) body coloration, but with a distinct line down
middle of back; large scales on under surface often with black markings.
This snake is a Great Basin form, taken at Walker Lake and near Mono
Lake.
The Garter Snakes are often called Water Snakes in
recognition of their association with streams, ponds, and wet meadows,
and through most of the Yosemite region they may be looked for
confidently in such surroundings. They occur the most widely of all the
snakes in the region. Moreover, they are often found in considerable
numbers in a single locality; hence, the Garter Snake population, as a
whole, is far above that of any of the other snakes, or, perhaps, of all
other snakes put together.
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Fig. 62. (a) Western
Yellow-bellied Racer; Yosemite Valley, June 4, 1915. (b) Giant
Garter Snake; Yosemite Valley, May 22, 1919. Both photographed from
freshly taken specimens, about 2/5 natural size.
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In hand or at close range the Garter Snakes may be
readily distinguished from all other snakes of the Yosemite region by
the fact that they possess keels or ridges on the scales of the back, in
combination with a pattern of coloration which never consists of large
blotches. The most usual color pattern among the Garter Snakes is a dark
upper surface with a light stripe down the middle of the back and
another similar stripe low on each side of the body. The Giant Garter
Snake is an exception, as it has only a short stripe on the neck region
and the rest of its body is flecked with small spots of light color. The
California Striped Racer of the foothill oaks and chaparral has a long
slender body and a dark upper surface with a stripe along each side but
not in the middle. This snake looks at first glance somewhat like a
garter snake, but all of its scales are smooth and it has no light line
down the middle of the back. The rattlesnake and gopher snake both have
keeled scales, but the patterns of coloration and bodily form in these
species are entirely different from those of the garter snakes.
The favorite haunt of the garter snakes is the margin
of a shallow pool with gently sloping shores and bottom, a pool bordered
closely by a dense stand of grass or other low plants. In such places
these snakes often abound. Five were noted close together on the shore
of one small pond near Tuolumne Meadows on July 6, 1915, and greater
numbers have been seen in other localities. Such a place gives the
snakes an easy retreat into the grass on one side and into the water on
the other, while food in the form of frogs, tadpoles, or small fishes is
usually to be obtained close by. When undisturbed the snakes will spend
much of the day in sunning themselves on the shores of such a pool.
When it takes to water a garter snake swims readily,
with only its head above the surface, making progress by whipping the
body from side to side in broad loops. At best its speed is slow, not to
be compared with that of any of the fishes, and after going a short
distance it will usually rest momentarily before resuming its course.
When resting in shallow water it will allow its body to sink to the
bottom and will hold only its head above the surface; but in a deeper
stream or pool it will glide up to the margin and rest its chin on a
projecting ledge or log. On land as well as in water these snakes are
slow movers, that is, for snakes. The form of the scales on the under
surface of their bodies, and the musculature by which the free edges of
these scales are lifted, do not seem to be adapted for rapid travel such
as is exhibited by the racers. The garter snakes make their best
progress when in a meadow, for there the scales get more of a purchase
on the irregularities of the grass and sod.
The garter snakes are not belligerent, rarely if ever
will they 'show fight' as do gopher snakes or rattlers. Even when
harried they usually try to slip quietly off into the grass or swim away
in the water. If captured, a garter snake will as a rule pour out a
malodorous liquid that is effective in procuring its release, especially
if its captor be a human being. How much of a protection from wild
enemies this odor affords, is not known.
Garter snakes have large litters of young. Rarely are
there less than 10 or a dozen, and litters of 20 and more are not
uncommon. The rapidity of its reproduction probably reflects the degree
of danger to which these reptiles are exposed. The eggs of Garter Snakes
are not deposited on land and left to hatch unattended, as are those of
many snakes, but are retained in the body of the female and developed
there, and the young are born alive.
These snakes do not usually have to go far from their
favorite haunts to find food, as they feed to a large extent on frogs,
toads, tadpoles, and small fishes. The relative scarcity of frogs in
certain meadows and along some of the slower moving streams, and their
unusual abundance in some of the highest mountain lakes and along the
swifter creeks, may perhaps be related to the presence or absence of
garter snakes in these respective localities. Although 'cold-blooded'
animals form the greater portion of the food of these snakes, they are
not averse to taking birds or mammals when occasion offers. At Mono Lake
Post Office on May 30, 1916, a Wandering Garter Snake was found trying
to swallow a barely fledged young Modoc Song Sparrow. Both of the parent
birds were highly excited and flew at the snake repeatedly.
The garter snakes, even in the lowlands, are seen but
little during the colder portions of the year, while at the higher
altitudes they spend several months in continuous hibernation. At Walker
Lake a Wandering Garter Snake was picked up at 9 o'clock on the morning
of September 13, 1915. It was some distance from water and so cold and
torpid that it made practically no effort to escape. It would probably
soon have gone into winter quarters in some sheltered crevice in the
rocks. Tracks of a garter snake were seen near Snow Flat on October 5,
1915, but no evidence of activity was obtained after that date anywhere
in the Yosemite region. By the third week of May, 1919, garter snakes
were becoming active in Yosemite Valley. One seen wriggling across a
road, May 21, near the Valley wall and going toward the river meadows,
may have only just emerged from hibernation.
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