Agkistrodon piscivorus leucostoma


Agkistrodon piscivorus leucostoma is a venomous snake that is endemic to the south central United States. A member of the subfamily Crotalinae of the family Viperidae, it is the smallest of the three subspecies of Agkistrodon piscivorus.

Description

Agkistrodon piscivorus leucostoma is a stout snake with a thick, muscular body. It is the smallest of the three subspecies of A. piscivorus. The average length of mature specimens is, while the maximum reported length is.
It is usually dark gray or brown with little or no markings, although a dorsal color pattern consisting of 10 to 15 dark crossbands can be seen in some specimens. Like other members of the species, its color darkens with age, and very old specimens may appear entirely black. Unlike the other two subspecies, the light line that borders the dark cheek strip is usually not present in this subspecies. The dorsal scales are keeled, in rows of 25 near the midbody, and the anal scale is undivided. Its broad, flat head is distinctly wider than its neck, and it has an elliptical pupil. By day the pupil appears as a narrow slit; at night the pupil is wide and may even look round.

Behavior

The animal opens its mouth widely when startled, exposing the whitish-colored oral mucosa; this is the reason it is commonly referred to as the "cottonmouth."

Common names

Western cottonmouth, water moccasin, cottonmouth, moccasin, blunt-tail moccasin, cottenmouth moccasin, stump-tail moccasin, viper, western cottonmouth moccasin, cotton-mouthed snake, Congo snake, trap-jaw, gapper.

Geographic range

Found in the United States, from southern Alabama along coast of the Gulf of Mexico, including many offshore islands, to southeastern and central Texas and north to Oklahoma, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, and southeastern Nebraska, and western Kentucky The type locality given is "western district of Tennessee." Schmidt proposed that this be amended to "10 miles northeast of Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tennessee."