Definitely NOT a copperhead. A copperhead has lighter "diamonds" over a darker background. This is either a northern or midland water snake. This thread has shown the problems with id'ing snakes, especially in the field with no fieldbook or way to determine certain features (triangular head, eye slits, etc) without getting close to the snake. A lot of snakes mimic venomous snakes, it's a great defense mechanism. Unfortunately, it backfires when humans are involved. Like i said in another thread, snakes are protected by state law, ALL snakes. Part of the reason for this is due to the difficulty in telling similar-looking species apart. Leave them all alone, and id'ing the snake is easy...it's a snake, give it space.
Chris
Last edited by txnative; 07-25-2011 at 07:26 AM.
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