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Article: Ecology of the Southeastern Crowned Snake, Tantilla coronata
- Article from:
- Copeia
- Article date:
- June 4, 2008
- Author:
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Copyright informationCopyright American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists Jun 4, 2008. Provided by ProQuest LLC. (Hide copyright information)
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There are very few comprehensive studies of the ecology of small-bodied snakes. Here, we describe the ecology and demography of the Southeastern Crowned Snake (Tantilla coronata) based on 1,640 captures on the Savannah River Site in the Upper Coastal Plain of South Carolina, USA from 1951-2007. Female T. coronata were significantly longer, heavier, and heavier-bodied than males but had relatively shorter tails. Clutch size based on oviductal eggs was positively correlated to maternal body mass and length. Snakes exhibited a unimodal seasonal activity pattern that peaked in summer. Pitfall captures were significantly male-biased from July-October, corresponding to the suggested mating period ...