100 Species #22: Common garter snake
Apr. 16th, 2011 05:46 pm
A common garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis) found at the edge of my driveway. The garter snake is North America's most common and abundant reptile. It is a small (rarely growing to 3 feet long) predator of earthworms, slugs, salamanders and other small animals. It prey to many other creatures including skunks, larger birds, and as I suspect in this case, house cats. I suspect a cat because this snake's carcass is entirely here, none of it is eaten, but it's head has been crushed by a bite. Most predators kill as a matter of feeding themselves, while domestic cats are sated of this need and kill because the instinct moves them to; they leave the dead behind as grisly offerings on pillows, doorsteps, and driveways.

Each scale on a garter snake is keeled, bearing its own central ridge, giving the skin an overall rough appearance. The garter snake is named for the band of fabric that holds up stockings, though many mishear the name as "garden snake."

The snake's crushed head. First I assumed that the snake was crushed by one of our cars, but no part of the body was flattened. I relocated the carcass to our brush pile, where it disappeared quickly, most likely into one of our local skunks.
Garter snakes have appeared in photos on this blog before, from Drumlin Farm, Franklin Park Zoo (as a wild, non-collection animal), and at Cutler Park.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 01:25 am (UTC)I know dogs can do no wrong in your house but you're very quick to blame cats
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 01:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 01:44 am (UTC)snakes, squirrels, various rodents.. even a deer leg from who knows where. You think people would be concerned about their dogs being exposed to parasites
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 01:53 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 02:08 am (UTC)and more cats are not fixed, it seems, as compared to dogs. i can't remember the last time i saw a puppy offering, but cats? all the bloody time.
i like cats, but they breed like rats. at least around here, they make good food for foxes and coyotes and fishers and ... as such, we don't have ferals anymore.
#
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 10:10 am (UTC)Thank FSM it wasn't a copperhead. . .
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 01:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 01:14 pm (UTC)I guess you're too busy to get involved in a TNR program so they don't breed, I suppose. So no you don't like them THAT much
we used to have alot around here too. No we just have a colony that's holding steady, everyone's been 'done'. There are solutions. And yes we have coyotes and fox and even a bobcat.
it's a rough life for ferals
some compassion would be nice
many of them used to be housecats but for the hateful heart of their former owners
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 01:20 pm (UTC)Last time 'puppy' was running around offleash and wound up in my backyard he was terrorizing a frog. I've seen him maim them before, just chew them up a little and spit them out
and fwiw that mutt isn't fixed. He's one of several with 'special' owners.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 02:13 pm (UTC)you seem to be under the misapprehension that
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 02:15 pm (UTC)don't be all holier than thou, it's not becoming.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 02:19 pm (UTC)yes it's better to call for the death of all free running cats
that's a finer solution
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 02:24 pm (UTC)the major pests are the people who allow them to breed uncontrollably, and dump them outside when it's convenient.
Cats are not protected by law in my state (CT) so people can poison them, treat them in horribly cruel manners .. and they do. Dogs are protected by law, so these people are prosecuted if they mistreat dogs. Cats.. meh. Disposable
by repeating 'feral cats are nothing but pests', it's feeding into this cycle. And the results are heartbreaking. So yes I have a problem with it.
but I guess that makes me 'holier then thou'
and I'm not going to change your mind so.. just keep your dogs on a leash and for chrissake please clean up their shit especially if you're by a water source.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 02:41 pm (UTC)being holier than thou is assuming that people have the same rabies about protecting feral cathood (and i might say here - to the detriment of other species) that you do. not everyone gives a fuck. oh well.
we are responsible dog owners - thanks!
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 02:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 03:49 pm (UTC)as for compassion, the ones we had weren't just strays, but full on wild, not much you can do with that. but we don't have those anymore, so it's not really even an issue.
#
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 04:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 05:42 pm (UTC)I may bring up cats as pests more than other animals because they are only pests due to the way people keep them (intact, free to roam), and I'm hoping, as I believe you are, that cat owners will change their behavior and prevent their pets from becoming pests.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-17 06:22 pm (UTC)Re: animals killing other animals, we were startled a couple of years ago when Tasha killed a rabbit. She had to be about nine at the time, not young for a larger dog like her, so we congratulated her on being that quick a hunter. Of course, we then had to worm her.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-18 11:01 am (UTC)