Eastern Mud Snake (Farancia a. abacura), family Colubridae, SE USA
This gorgeous nocturnal aquatic snake feeds on aquatic salamanders, like sirens and amphiumas, which it pins down with its sharp pointed tail.
photograph by Ryan McGreevy
seen from Brazil
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seen from United States
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Eastern Mud Snake (Farancia a. abacura), family Colubridae, SE USA
This gorgeous nocturnal aquatic snake feeds on aquatic salamanders, like sirens and amphiumas, which it pins down with its sharp pointed tail.
photograph by Ryan McGreevy
Sin snake stickers, inspired by Cult of the Lamb and based on the mud snake (Farancia abacura). Cyclops as they be, so a little bit of teratology too.
Mud Snake (Farancia abacura)
Family: Colubrid Family (Colubridae)
IUCN Conservation Status: Least Concern
Found mainly in rivers and swamps across much of the southeastern USA, the Mud Snake spends much of its life in the water, feeding primarily on large salamanders such as sirens and amphiumas and typically coming onto land only to bask, lay eggs or travel to other bodies of water during periods of drought. While they lack the venom that many aquatic snakes rely on to subdue prey, members of this species possess a large number of unusually long, curved teeth that aid them in catching slippery animals before swallowing them whole; when threatened they curl their bodies into tight coils and flash their striking red-striped bellies at perceived attackers, although as their teeth are made more for gripping than injuring and they lack venom, this is largely a bluff. Between October and November, when the weather in their native range becomes colder and their prey becomes scarcer, Mud Snakes enter a prolonged state of dormancy in muddy crevices or abandoned burrows, and after emerging again in the spring adults mate, with females laying clutches of over 100 eggs shortly afterwards, leaving them in wet, sheltered places where they will be kept warm and damp until they hatch roughly 60 days later.
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Image Source: https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/30106-Farancia-abacura
Western Mud Snake (Farancia abacura reinwardtii) by Peter Paplanus
Western mud snakes are nocturnal, semi-aquatic predators that feed mostly on frogs and can reach 6 feet in length.
Mud Snakes are also known as "horn snakes" because their tails end in horn-like tips. It was first thought that the point was used as a stinger to attack their prey, but it is now believed to have evolved both to restrain prey and to aid in movement through the mud.
this colorful boy is a MUD SNAKE (Farancia abacura)
HERE are some COOL mud snake facts:
they spend most of their time in the swamp water eating very LONG and SKINNY salamanders (Sirens and Amphiumas)
they are NONVENOMOUS and rarely bite, so if you see one on your property just leave it alone! it’s not a danger to you or your pets!
but if you pick it up it may poke you with its tail to tell you that it WANTS DOWN
they are very PRETTY
i LOVE them
(pic source)
The beautiful belly of a mud snake [Farancia abacura], a nonvenomous snake endemic to the southeastern United States. This specimen was spotted in Texas by photographer Matthew Kwiatkowski.
Eastern Mud Snake Farancia A. Abacura Source: Here
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