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COSEWIC designation: May 2004
SARA risk category: Threatened
Description: One of BC’s largest snakes; adults
are from 60 to 150 cm in length. Background colour is brown, tan, olive
or grey, overlaid by large dark-brown blotches along the back and smaller
blotches along the sides. The under-parts are usually yellowish-white.
The end of the tail has a rattle-like structure that gives this snake
its name.
Habitat: Restricted to habitats characterized by
bluebunch wheatgrass grasslands and open Douglas-fir and ponderosa pine
parklands. The warmest and driest portions of the province in summer.
Threats: Many of the warm southern valleys have
become heavily settled. Farms, subdivisions, highways, and other developments
have destroyed some rattlesnake dens and foraging areas, and many snakes
are killed by highway traffic. These treats will become more serious as
land development and human populations increase. Due to predation they
have a low annual survivorship, combined with a low rate of reproduction
means that populations can increase only slowly in size.
If
you wish to know more about the Western Rattlesnake, click
here
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