Coral Snake

coral snake

Old World Coral Snakes – Calliophis, Hemibungarus & Sinomicrurus and New World Coral Snakes – Leptomicrurus, Micruroides, & Micrurus

The North American coral snake is a species of venomous elapid snake with small fangs that are permanently erect that you could see on an Everglades boat tour. While these snakes are very elusive, they possess one of the most potent venoms of any North American snake. Like all elapid snakes, coral snakes have small hollow fangs, which they use to deliver their venom.

Coral Snake Habitat

Everglades National Park airboat tours, Fort Lauderdale airboat tours, and Miami airboat tours go through the habitat that these animals call home. These snakes spend the majority of their lives buried beneath the ground or hidden in leaf litter of rainforest floors, coming to the surface only when it rains or during mating season. New world coral snakes span the southern region of the United States, found in southern coastal plains from North Carolina to Louisiana, and all of Florida. They are commonly found in pine and scrub oak sandhill habitats, but are sometimes also found in hardwood areas and pine flatwoods that experience seasonal flooding.

Size & Appearance

Once you are aboard a group airboat tours or private airboat tours, you will find that coral snakes have a universal red-yellow-black pattern that is a series of rings (wide red and black rings separated by narrow yellow rings) that encircle the body. The colorful body is slender and the black blunt head blends seamlessly into the body with no distinctive neck. The eyes have round pupils and unlike other snakes, they have no heat-sensing pits. The average coral snake grows to be around 3 feet (91 cm) in length, but can be up to 5 feet.

Diet

Coral snakes have a carnivorous diet and mostly eat lizards, frogs and other reptiles. They will also occasionally feed on smaller snakes. They are able to consume many types of food due to their being able to open their jaws very widely. Before swallowing their prey whole, they will paralyze it with the venom in their fangs. When they capture larger prey, these snakes will eat it and find a quiet resting place during the slow digestion process, allowing them to go weeks without feeding again.

Fun Facts

  • They can be identified by the arrangement of colored stripes on their body. Remember: “Red and yellow, kill a fellow. Red and black, friend of Jack.”
  • Coral snakes are not aggressive or prone to biting.
  • They account for less than one percent of all snake bites in the United States each year.
  • Bites are becoming more dangerous in the U.S. as lack of demand for the anti-venom has drastically slowed its production.
  • They are often confused with some non-venomous snakes of similar coloration, including the milk snake and scarlet kingsnake.
  • Coral snakes are the only venomous North American snake that are not pit vipers.
  • No deaths have been recorded since the anti-venom was developed in 1967.



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