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Garter snake is the for small to medium-sized belonging to the Thamnophis in the family . They are native to and , ranging from central in the north to in the south.

With about 35 recognized species and subspecies, garter snakes are highly variable in appearance; generally, they have large round eyes with rounded pupils, a slender build, (appearing ‘raised’), and a pattern of longitudinal stripes that may or may not include spots (although some have no stripes at all). Certain subspecies have stripes of blue, yellow, or red, mixed with black tops and beige-tan underbelly markings. They also vary significantly in total length, from .

With no real consensus on the classification of the species of Thamnophis, disagreements between taxonomists and disputed sources (such as field guides) are common. One area of debate, for example, is whether or not two specific types of snake are separate species, or of the same. Garter snakes are closely related to the genus (water snakes), with some species having been moved back and forth between genera.

As garter snakes may retain toxins from their amphibian prey in their liver, they are one of the few species of snakes in the world that can be both venomous and poisonous.


Taxonomy
The first garter snake to be scientifically described was the eastern garter snake (now Thamnophis sirtalis sirtalis), by zoologist and taxonomist in 1758. The genus Thamnophis was described by Leopold Fitzinger in 1843 as the genus for the garter snakes and ribbon snakes. Many snakes previously identified as their own genera or species have been reclassified as species or subspecies in Thamnophis. The currently recognised 37 species in the genus, some with several subspecies.


Distribution and habitat
Native to and , in the genus Thamnophis can be found in all of the lower 48 United States, and all of the Canadian provinces. They are found from the plains of west-central east through and ; from and south to , across the southern and central U.S. into the arid regions of the southwest and , and south to the neotropics and .

Garter snakes are not originally native to the eastern Canadian island of Newfoundland, but have been breeding there in the wild and gradually spreading since at least 2010. It is unknown how they reached the island, probably accidentally via shipments or as escaped pets.CBC News, " Think there aren't any snakes in Newfoundland? Think again", June 25, 2024. Accessed on June 27, 2024.Nature Conservancy Canada, " Snakes, saints and sightings: What you can do to help uncover the mystery of gartersnakes in Newfoundland". Accessed on June 27, 2024.

Their wide distribution is due to their varied diets and adaptability to different habitats, with varying proximity to water. However, in the western part of North America these snakes are more aquatic than in the eastern portion. Garter snakes live in a variety of habitats, including forests, woodlands, fields, grasslands and lawns, but never far from water, often an adjacent wetland, stream or pond. This reflects the fact that amphibians are a large part of their diet. Garter snakes are often found near small ponds with tall weeds.


Behavior
Garter snakes have complex communication systems. They can find other snakes by following their pheromone-scented trails. Male and female skin pheromones are so different as to be immediately distinguishable. However, male garter snakes sometimes produce both male and female pheromones. During the mating season, this ability fools other males into attempting to mate with them. This causes the transfer of heat to them in , which is an advantage immediately after , allowing them to become more active. Male snakes giving off both male and female pheromones have been shown to garner more copulations than normal males in the that form at the den when females enter the mating melee. A snake hatch can include as many as 57 young.

Garter snakes use the vomeronasal organ to communicate via pheromones through tongue flicking, which gathers chemical cues in the environment. Upon entering the lumen of the organ, the chemical molecules will come into contact with the sensory cells, which are attached to the neurosensory epithelium of the vomeronasal organ.

If disturbed, a garter snake may coil and strike, but it typically hides its head and flails its tail. These snakes will also discharge a malodorous, musky-scented secretion from a gland near the . This secretion from North American garter snakes contains seven highly odoriferous volatile components: , , 2-methylpropanoic, , and 3-methylbutanoic acids; and , and 2-piperidone. They often use these techniques to escape when ensnared by a predator. They will also slither into the water to escape a predator on land. , , , , cranes, , and other snake species (such as and ) will eat garter snakes, with even and eating the juveniles. Being , like all , garter snakes bask in the sun to regulate their body temperature. During (the reptile equivalent of hibernation), garter snakes typically occupy large communal sites called hibernacula. These snakes will migrate large distances to .


Social behavior
A long-term study by the Ontario Ministry of Transportation has shed light on the social behavior of Butler's garter snakes. The study, conducted in a 250-hectare area near Windsor, Canada, tracked over 3,000 individual snakes over a 12-year period. The findings challenge previous assumptions about solitary snake behavior and suggest that these snakes form social groups and communities. The study revealed that Butler's garter snakes do not wander randomly but instead tend to associate with specific groups of snakes. These groups typically consist of three to four individuals, with some larger groups reaching up to 46 snakes.


Diet
Garter snakes, like all snakes, are carnivorous. Their diet consists of almost any creature they are capable of overpowering: , (nightcrawlers, as are toxic to garter snakes), , , (including eggs), , and . When living near water, they eat other aquatic animals. The ribbon snake ( Thamnophis saurita) in particular favors (including ), readily eating them despite their strong chemical defenses. Food is swallowed whole. Garter snakes often adapt to eating whatever they can find and whenever they can find it because food can be either scarce or abundant. Although they feed mostly on live they will sometimes eat eggs.


Venom
Garter snakes were long thought to be non-, but discoveries in the early 2000s revealed that they produce a neurotoxic venom. Despite this, garter snakes cannot seriously injure or kill humans with the small amounts of comparatively mild venom they produce and they also lack an effective means of delivering it. In a few cases, some swelling and bruising has been reported. They do have enlarged teeth in the back of their mouths but their gums are significantly larger and the secretions of their Duvernoy's gland are only mildly toxic.

Evidence suggests that garter snake and populations share an evolutionary link in their resistance levels, implying between predator and prey. Garter snakes feeding on toxic newts can also retain those toxins in their liver for weeks, making those snakes poisonous as well as venomous.


Conservation status
Despite the decline in their population from collection as pets (especially in the more northerly regions, in which large groups are collected at hibernation), pollution of aquatic areas, and the introduction of American bullfrogs as potential predators, garter snakes are still some of the most commonly found reptiles in much of their ranges. The San Francisco garter snake ( Thamnophis sirtalis tetrataenia), however, has been on the endangered list since 1969. Predation by has also been responsible for the decline of the narrow-headed garter snake ( Thamnophis rufipunctatus). Many breeders have bred all species of garter snakes, making it a popular breed.


Species and subspecies
Arranged alphabetically by scientific name:
Thamnophis ahumadai Jalisco Mountain, Mexico
  • Santa Cruz garter snake, T. a. atratus
  • Oregon garter snake, T. a. hydrophilus
  • Diablo Range garter snake, T. a. zaxanthus
| coast of Oregon and California.

Oaxaca, Mexico

northwestern Pennsylvania and southwestern New York.

northwestern Ohio, northeastern Indiana, the eastern portion of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan, and the adjacent extreme southern tip of Ontario, Canada.

Mexico.

Puebla and Veracruz, Mexico.

Mexico.

California and Oregon in the United States
  • Western blackneck garter snake, T. c. cyrtopsis
  • Eastern blackneck garter snake, T. c. ocellatus
  • Tropical blackneck garter snake, T. c. collaris
| southwestern United States, Mexico and Guatemala
  • garter snake, T. e. arizonae
  • Mountain garter snake, T. e. elegans
  • San Pedro Mártir garter snake, T. e. hueyi
  • Coastal garter snake, T. e. terrestris
  • Wandering garter snake, T. e. vagrans
  • Upper Basin garter snake, T. e. vascotanneri
|central British Columbia, central Alberta, and southwestern Manitoba in Canada, central United States
  • Mexican garter snake, T. e. eques
  • Laguna Totolcingo garter snake, T. e. carmenensis
  • T. e. cuitzeoensis
  • T. e. diluvialis
  • T. e. insperatus
  • Northern Mexican garter snake, T. e. megalops
  • T. e. obscurus
  • T. e. patzcuaroensis
  • T. e. scotti
  • T. e. virgatenuis
| Mexico and in the United States (Arizona and New Mexico).

Chihuahua, Durango, Jalisco, Nayarit, and Zacatecas States of Mexico.

Mexico.

Mexico.

Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

central California.

southern Mexico

central California to Baja California, Mexico

Mexico.
  • T. m. marcianus
  • T. m. praeocularis
  • T. m. bovalli
| southwestern United States, Mexico, and Central America.
  • Gray blackbelly garter snake, T. m. canescens
  • Chihuahuan blackbelly garter snake, T. m. chihuahuanensis
  • Lined blackbelly garter snake, T. m. linearis
  • Mexican blackbelly garter snake, T. m. melanogaster
| Mexico.

Mexico.

Durango, Mexico.

California, Oregon, and Washington; in Canada, it is found in British Columbia

Mexico.
  • Highlands ribbon snake, T. p. alpinus
  • Arid land ribbon snake, T. p. diabolicus
  • Gulf Coast ribbon snake, T. p. orarius
  • Orangestripe ribbon snake or western ribbon snake T. p. proximus
  • Redstripe ribbon snake, T. p. rubrilineatus
  • Mexican ribbon snake, T. p. rutiloris
| western United States, Mexico, and Central America

Mexico.

central United States as far north as Canada and as far south as Texas.

Mexico.

Arizona and New Mexico, and in the Mexican states of Sonora, Chihuahua and Durango
  • Bluestripe ribbon snake, T. s. nitae
  • Southern ribbon snake, T. s. sackenii
  • Eastern ribbon snake, T. s. saurita
  • Northern ribbon snake, T. s. septentrionalis
| Eastern North America

Mexico.

Mexico.
  • Texas garter snake, T. s. annectens
  • Red-spotted garter snake, T. s. concinnus
  • New Mexico garter snake, T. s. dorsalis
  • valley garter snake, T. s. fitchi
  • California red-sided garter snake, T. s. infernalis
  • T. s. lowei
  • Maritime garter snake, T. s. pallidulus
  • Red-sided garter snake, T. s. parietalis
  • garter snake, T. s. pickeringii
  • Blue-striped garter snake, T. s. similis
  • Eastern garter snake, T. s. sirtalis
  • Chicago garter snake, T. s. semifasciatus
  • San Francisco garter snake, T. s. tetrataenia
| North America

Mexico.

Mexico.
  • Mexican Pacific Lowlands garter snake, T. v. celaeno
  • T. v. isabellae
  • T. v. thamnophisoides
  • T. v. validus
| Mexico.

In the above list, a binomial authority or a in parentheses indicates that the species or subspecies was originally described in a genus other than Thamnophis.


See also
  • Narcisse Snake Dens
  • List of snakes, overview of all snake families and genera


Further reading
  • Conant R (1975). A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America, Second Edition. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. xviii + 429 pp. + Plates 1-48. (hardcover), (paperback). (Genus Thamnophis, p. 157).
  • Fitzinger L (1843). Systema Reptilium, Fasciculus Primus, Amblyglossae. Vienna: Braumüller & Seidel. 106 pp. + indices. ( Thamnophis, new genus, p. 26). (in Latin).
  • , Goin, Olive B.; (1978). Introduction to Herpetology, Third Edition. San Francisco: W.H. Freeman and Company. xi + 378 pp. . ( Thamnophis, pp. 132, 156, 326).
  • Powell R, Conant R, Collins JT (2016). Peterson Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America, Fourth Edition. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. xiv + 494 pp., 47 plates, 207 figures. . (Genus Thamnophis, p. 426).
  • Ruthven AG (1908). "Variation and Genetic Relationships of the Garter-snakes". Bulletin of the United States National Museum 61: 1–201, 82 figures.
  • Schmidt, Karl P.; Davis, D. Dwight (1941). Field Book of Snakes of the United States and Canada. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 365 pp., 34 plates, 103 figures. (Genus Thamnophis, p. 236).
  • Stebbins RC (2003). A Field Guide to Western Reptiles and Amphibians, Third Edition. The Peterson Field Guide Series. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company. xiii + 533 pp., 56 plates. . (Genus Thamnophis, pp. 373–374).
  • Vandenburgh J, Slevin JR (1918). "The Garter-snakes of Western North America". Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences, Fourth Series 8: 181–270, 11 plates.


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