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Rattle snake ID?

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    #16
    Originally posted by rferg84 View Post
    We call them prairie rattlers.
    This^^^

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      #17
      Not sure... ain't the pygmies a lil shorter?

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        #18
        found this pic
        Attached Files

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          #19
          He's not a prairie rattler. Prairie rattlers are all that we have here and they don't have a coon tail on them. It might be a massasagua.

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            #20
            Prairie rattlers don't have black/white stripes on their tails.

            Oops, txarcher beat me to it.

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              #21
              What county?

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                #22
                heck if i know, but its a better snake than before the pic was taken.

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                  #23
                  Originally posted by crittergitter View Post
                  anybody ever seen or killed a grey rattle snake? i think they are called rock rattlers

                  i killed one north of sonora. you could here him rattling in between the rocks as we walked over them.
                  Yea, I have. They're protected!


















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                    #24
                    Originally posted by ladrones View Post
                    Is that a western massasauga?
                    This was my first thought also.

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                      #25
                      Originally posted by Cuz View Post
                      Yea, I have. They're protected!
                      it is not listed.



                      Snakes State Status Federal Status (Listed)
                      Scarlet Snake
                      Cemophora coccinea Threatened
                      Black-striped Snake
                      Coniophanes imperialis Threatened
                      Texas Indigo Snake
                      Drymarchon melanurus erebennus Threatened
                      Speckled Racer
                      Drymobius margaritiferus Threatened
                      Northern Cat-eyed Snake
                      Leptodeira septentrionalis Threatened
                      Brazos Water Snake
                      Nerodia harteri Threatened
                      Concho Water Snake
                      Concho Water Snake (PDF 335.9 KB)
                      Nerodia paucimaculata Threatened - Proposed for Delisting
                      Smooth Green Snake
                      Liochlorophis vernalis Threatened
                      Louisiana Pine Snake
                      Pituophis ruthveni Threatened Federal Candidate for Listing
                      Trans-Pecos Black-headed Snake
                      Tantilla cucullata Threatened
                      Chihuahuan Desert Lyre Snake
                      Trimorphodon vilkinsonii Threatened
                      Timber (Canebrake) Rattlesnake
                      Crotalus horridus Threatened
                      Salamanders
                      State Status

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                        #26
                        I think it's just a regular ol' Western Diamondback.

                        I've seen a bunch of Prairie Rattlesnakes and have never seen one that looked like that before.They don't have black and white bands on their tail and their patterns are more of a square shape than diamond shaped.And Western Massasauga's look very similar to a Prairie Rattlesnake.I think maybe that one could have just recently shed its skin so that's why it looks a little lighter in color???I don't really know that for a fact but that's my best guess.

                        I forgot to mention that both Mojave Rattlesnakes and Western Diamondbacks have black and white bands on their tail like that.One of the easiest ways to tell the difference is to look at the width of the black and white bands on their tail.The width of the bands will be the same on the Western Diamondback.The white bands on Mojave Rattlesnakes are wider than the black bands.
                        Last edited by okrattler; 05-06-2012, 11:14 PM.

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                          #27
                          what did the tail look like?

                          I think I killed a rock rattler? (maybe some call a prairie rattler) Real County Texas

                          had a black tip, no bands leading up the the rattler.

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                            #28
                            Originally posted by Adgerc15 View Post
                            what did the tail look like?

                            I think I killed a rock rattler? (maybe some call a prairie rattler) Real County Texas

                            had a black tip, no bands leading up the the rattler.
                            That sounds like it might be a velvet tail.

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