
Santa Cruz County, AZ
![]() Maricopa Co., AZ |
![]() Santa Cruz Co., AZ |
| SONORAN CORALSNAKE Micruroides euryxanthus | Venomous |
| DESCRIPTION: A small (up to 615 mm or 24" in total length), slender, brightly-colored snake with red, yellow or cream, and black rings that completely encircle the body. The red bands touch the yellow bands. The scales in the dorsal portion of the red bands often have black edges creating a net-like pattern over the red. Some specimens are marked with heavy black speckling or mottling in the dorsal portion of the red bands. The head and snout are black. The tail usually lacks red bands. The cloacal scute is red on Arizona specimens. The blunt head is barely distinct from the neck and the tail is relatively short and blunt. The pupils are round and the scales are smooth and shiny. Its black snout distinguishes this snake from the similar looking Western Shovel-nosed Snake and Sonoran Shovel-nosed Snake. DISTRIBUTION: This snake is found across most of the southern portion of the state below approximately 6,000' elevation. Its distribution in the low deserts of western Arizona is spotty and poorly known. HABITAT: The Sonoran Coral Snake is found in communities ranging form Sonoran, Mohave, and Chihuahuan desertscrubs, through Semidesert Grassland, and into the lower reaches of the woodlands. It is usually encountered above the flats in or near rocky or gravelly drainages, mesquite lined washes, and canyons. |
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