Print this Encyclopedia Page Print This Section in a New Window This item is currently being edited or your authorship application is still pending. View published version of content View references for this item

Rough Green Snake

Authored By: Wilson

Opheodrys aestivus

RGSN

Status

The Rough Green Snake is generally uncommon throughout its range but common in localized areas.

Description

The Rough Green Snake is a medium-sized (56–116 cm), extremely slender snake. It is uniformly green dorsally, with a yellow or greenish-yellow venter.

Distribution

Opheodrys aestivus ranges from southern New Jersey to the Florida Keys. Westward, it extends to Kansas and Texas and into Mexico.

Habitat

The Rough Green Snake, an agile climber, is frequently found among shrubs and overhanging vegetation around lakes and streams. It is usually found at forest edges (ecotones) or in fairly open forests. Vegetation types include cypress ponds, bottomland hardwoods, pine flatwoods, pond pine-sweet bay pocosins, and vine tangles.

Special Requirements

This snake requires open-canopied forests or fields with abundant shrubs, vines and small trees.

Breeding Habits

Opheodrys is oviparous, females depositing 3–12 eggs during late spring or summer. Communal nesting sometimes occurs (Martof and others 1980).

Food Habits

The Rough Green Snake feeds primarily on soft-bodied arthropods, especially spiders, crickets, grasshoppers, and caterpillars.

Management Suggestions

This snake requires open woodlands with abundant understory or midstory. Management practices such as periodic burning, selective cutting, and tree harvesting without extensive site preparation will maintain or create habitat for this species.

Additional References

Plummer 1981, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1990; Wright and Wright 1957.


Click to hide citations... Literature Cited
  • Martof, B. S.; Palmer, W. M.; Bailey, J. R., et al. 1980. Amphibians and reptiles of the Carolinas and Virginia. Chapel Hill, NC: UP.

Encyclopedia ID: p2014



Home » So. Appalachian » Resource Management » Terrestrial Wildlife » The Land Manager's Guide to the Amphibians and Reptiles of the South » Reptiles (Class Reptilia) » Snakes (Order Squamata; Suborder Serpentes) » Nonvenomous Snakes (Colubridae) » Rough Green Snake



 
Skip to content. Skip to navigation
Text Size: Large | Normal | Small