The ribbon snake is a common species of garter snake native to Eastern North America. It is a non-venomous species of snake in the subfamilyNatricinae of the familyColubridae. The ribbon snake averages in total length. It is dark brown with bright yellow stripes. The ribbon snake is not sexually dimorphic; however, females are normally thicker than their male counterparts. The ribbon snake can be found in wet climates such as creek-beds, streams, lakes, wet woodlands, and marsh areas. The ribbon snake is active from April to October and hibernates during the winter months. Maturity is reached around 3 years of age.
Subspecies
The following four subspecies of ribbon snake are recognized as being valid:
Eastern ribbon snake – T. s. saurita – brown body with three distinctive stripes, typically yellow, one down the middle of the back and one down each side, that alternate with the brown body. Ranges from New York to Florida, west to the Mississippi River.
Northern ribbon snake – T. s. septentrionalis – dark brown/black; ranges from Maine through Ontario and Indiana.
Southern ribbon snake or peninsula ribbon snake – T. s. sackenii – tan or brown; ranges from South Carolina south through Florida.
Bluestripe ribbon snake – T. s. nitae – dark with light blue lateral stripes; Gulf Coast of north-central Florida.
Nota bene: A trinomial authority in parentheses indicates that the subspecies was originally described in a genus other than Thamnophis.
Habitat
Ribbon snakes are typically found in aquatic and high-vegetation areas such as marshes, ponds, streams, and lakes. Since they hunt for ectothermic animals, they tend to live in areas that are mainly water, making it easier for them to swim and catch their prey. Although most of them live in aquatic areas, they also tend to reside in forests or higher rocky areas.
Prey and predators
In order to hunt, ribbon snakes use a few of their senses including auditory and visual perception. Ribbon snakes do not eatwarm blooded prey, just as garter snakes, also of the genusThamnophis, do not. Using their auditory and visual traits, they are able to prey upon newts, salamanders, frogs, toads, tadpoles, small fish, spiders, and earthworms. Meanwhile, they fall prey to mammals, birds, and larger amphibians and reptiles. Ribbon snakes rarely use any aggressive form of defense. Instead they use their brown bodies to camouflage with the surrounding vegetation. Along with this, they flee and hide in dense patches of grass in which they will coil up and get as low to the ground as possible. Given that snakes consume their prey whole, small individuals are particularly restrained by the size and shape of prey that can be consumed. These smaller snakes compensate for their smaller body size by having larger heads.
Reproduction
Beginning in the spring, after hibernation, ribbon snakes begin to look for another snake with which to mate. Ribbon snakes are ovoviviparous snakes, meaning they give birth to live young. The live young tend to be born in the summer, in litters of 4 to 27 snakes. Ribbon snakes tend to mature after 2 to 3 years, which is when they will be able to start breeding. Ribbon snakes tend to breed once or twice each year after they mature.