THE miNCIFAL SPECIES OF POISONOUS SNAKES 125 



Total length, 1,520 iiiilliuietres ; tail 140. 



Habitat : Western North America, from British Columbia to 

 South California, eastwards to Assiniboia, Dakota, Nebraska, 

 Kansas, and Western and Southern Texas ; Northern Mexico. 



According to Holbrook, this reptile feeds upon young rabbits, 

 squirrels, rats and other small mammals. It lays its eggs in 

 August, and the young are hatched at once, and are capable of 

 seeking their own food. 



In captivity as well as under natural conditions the Mottled 

 Eattle-Snake is an excessively irritable species. " The noise of 

 the wind," says Brehm, "or even the distant view of a man or 

 animal, are sufficient to irritate it. It then coils itself up in a 

 spiral, and places its head and tail in the centre of the disc thus 

 formed, in a state of absolute immobility. After a short interval 

 the creature raises its head to a height of about 8 to 12 inches 

 above the ground, curves its neck in the shape of an S, and 

 elevates its tail into a vertical position and shakes it vigorously, 

 whereupon the strident noise caused by the rattle is heard. So 

 rapid are the movements communicated by the Crotahis to its tail 

 that they can scarcely be distinguished. So long as the Crotalus 

 believes itself menaced it remains in the position that we have 

 just described, and continues to sound its rattle. If one withdraws 

 from the irritated snake, the sound gradually lessens and ceases, 

 to begin again more vigorously when the reptile is once more 

 approached." 



The bite of these snakes is exceedingly dangerous. Pigs wage 

 an inveterate war against them and devour them. 



At the Pasteur Institute at Lille, I have kept several of these 

 reptiles in captivity for eighteen months and longer. They 

 invariably refused their food, and I always had to resort to 

 artificial feeding. They are easily capable of withstanding a 

 prolonged fast. 



(4) C. diirissus (Common Eattle-Snake). — 7 or .s longitudinal 



