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Adult, San Diego County mountains |
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Adult, San Bernardino Mountains, San Bernardino County |
Adult, Riverside County |
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Captive adult, Santa Barbara County |
Adult, Riverside County |
Adult, Santa Barbara County
© Jen Castle |
Adult, Riverside County
© Jeff Ahrens |
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Adult, Riverside County |
Adult, San Luis Obispo County © Patrick Briggs |
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Adult, Orange County © Tadd Kraft |
Adult, Riverside County |
Adult, San Bernardino County © Patrick Briggs |
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Adult, Orange County © Ivan Vershynin |
Adult, Riverside County
© Jeff Ahrens |
Adult, San Diego County coast,
© Patrick Briggs |
Underside of adult, San Diego County |
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Adult, Orange County © Brian Nann |
This adult is shown as it was found, climbing a rock next to a damp stream bed on an April morning in a Riverside County canyon.
© Graham Garber |
This San Diego Gophersnake was observed crawling up the stucco wall next to the front door on the outside of a house in Riverside County.
© Gary Sopata |
Adult, Riverside County
© Emile Bado |
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This snake was found at a home in the mountains of Santa Catalina Island. |
This San Diego County adult is displaying a typical gophersnake defensive posture with the head flattened into a triangular shape and the body semi-coiled, which resemble a defensive rattlesnake. Typically a gophersnake will also hiss loudlhy and shake its tail to make a rattling sound in dry leaves. © Michael Van Zandt |
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Adult, Los Angeles County desert,
© Zeev Nitzan Ginsburg |
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Juveniles |
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Juvenile, San Diego County |
Juvenile, San Diego County,
© Patrick Briggs |
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Sub-adult, San Diego County |
Sub-adult, Riverside County |
Subadult, San Diego County,
© Patrick Briggs |
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Interesting or Unusual San Diego Gophersnakes |
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Albino adult, San Diego County. © Richard E. Brewer |
Patternless adult, Los Angeles County
© 2006 John Michels |
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This juvenile gophersnake with two heads was found near the Santa Ana mountains in Riverside County.
wo-headed snakes are rare, but they show up occasionally in the wild and with captive breeding.
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Patternless adult, Los Angeles County
© 2006 John Michels |
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White-sided adult, San Bernardino County © Matt Sjostrom |
Adult with an orange stripe and yellow dots on its back from the Santa Monica Mountains, Ventura County.
© Max Roberts |
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This San Diego Gophersnake with a dorsal stripe on much of its body was found a half a mile or more from the similar snake to the left in Ventura County.
© Max Roberts |
This snake from San Diego County has a partial dorsal stripe © Ivan Vershynin |
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This partially-striped adult San Diego Gophersnake was photographed in Ventura County. © Peregrine Wolff.
Most striped gophersnakes seem to be Pacific Gophersnakes found in Solano and Napa Counties. |
This adult snake from Monterey County has an unusual pattern, or lack of one, on the upper part of its body. © Ryan Sikola |
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Adult from near Chino, San Bernardino County © Jeff Ahrens |
Adult from near Chino, San Bernardino County © Jeff Ahrens |
Both of the snakes above show some similiarities in appearance to the subspecies P. c. affinis, but they were found at least 50 miles from the range of that subspecies.
They were also found within close proximity at the same time which tends to rule out the likelihood they were both transported and released to the area. |
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This Riverside County adult has an unusual amount of yellow. © B. Kraus |
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Snakes From Intergrade Areas |
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Adult from Los Angeles County intergrade area where P. c. annectens intergrades with P. c. deserticola. © Patrick Briggs |
This adult snake from the desert in Riverside County near San Gorgonio pass where the two subspecies meet shows a dark pattern towards the head characteristic of P. c. annectens and a yellow-orange coloration at the tail end characteristic of P. c. affinis. © Dave Zeldin |
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This pink-sided adult is from the area in Los Angeles County where San Diego and Great Basin Gophersnakes interbreed. © Zeev Nitzan Ginsburg |
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Gophersnakes Feeding |
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Juvenile Pacific Gophersnake, Mariposa County, eating a Western Fence Lizard
© Daniel Harris |
This dead juvenile Pacific Gophersnake was found in Sutter County. It appears to have a leg, but on closer inspection, it is the leg of what is probably an alligator lizard that broke through the snake's side after the snake swallowed it.
© Kevin Bryant |
Adult Pacific Gophersnake, Kings County, preparing to eat its namesake mammal - a gopher. © Patrick Briggs |
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Adult Pacific Gophersnake in a bird's nest eating a duck egg, Kings County,
© Patrick Briggs |
A juvenile Pacific Gophersnake eating a Coast Range Fence Lizard in Sonoma County © Gérard Menut |
Matt Maxon and Johanna Turner were hiking in Big Tujunga Canyon in Los Angeles County when they discovered a large dead rodent that appeared to have been partially swallowed and spit out. (Left) On returning to the same spot about two hours later, they noticed the rodent was gone, and soon discovered a San Diego Gophersnake swallowing it. (Right) Did the snake kill the rodent, attempt to eat it, then spit it out and return later to try again, or was more than one predator involved? We'll never know, but that sure is more than a mouthful.
© Matt Maxon and Johanna Turner. |
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Debbie Frost saw a Great Basin Gophersnake that had just bred in Lassen County crawl down a hole, and quickly coming back up with a kangaroo rat. The snake then crawled into the shade made by Debbie's shadow and ate while she watched. |
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Gophersnake Predation |
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A California Kingsnake killing a Pacific Gophersnake
for dinner in Contra Costa County. © Tim Dayton |
Gophersnakes are sometimes preyed upon by birds of prey, or raptors. Here, a San Diego Gophersnake is carried off by a Red-tailed Hawk in coastal San Luis Obispo County. © Joel A. Germond |
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California Kingsnakes are powerful predators capable of eating other snakes almost as large as they are. Here you can see one eating a Pacific Gophersnake. © Patrick Brigg
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A juvenile Red-tailed Hawk with a freshly-killed San Diego Gophersnake in coastal San Luis Obispo County. © Joel A. Germond |
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Breeding |
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Two adults all twisted up in Los Angeles County - they were described to me as a mating pair, but the are most likely two males fighting over access to a nearby female. © Chris Mowry
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San Diego Gophersnakes wrestling on a Riverside County rural road in May during the breeding season. © Dorothy Sheldrake. Click the image on the right to watch a short video. |
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Gophersnake Tracks |
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Young adult, San Diego County. Its tracks on a sandy road show how it slipped from side to side to get traction in the sand. |
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Tracks of a large adult across a harder surface are almost in a straight line,
San Diego County |
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The Danger of Plastic Netting to Snakes |
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Suzanne Camejo found this San Diego Gophersnake in an apricot tree which it had climbed probably trying to raid a Mockingbird nest. The snake was entangled in synthetic netting used to protect the fruit from birds. Suzanne and her friends cut the netting, which had dug into the snake's skin, to free the snake. They were repaid with the hissing and striking of a very stressed-out snake, but one that was now free to crawl away and continue to rid the garden of rodents and rabbits.
Although netting is used as a natural method to deter agricultural pests, as well as for erosion control, it can be a great hazard to some animals, especially snakes.
Photos © Suzanne Camejo |
This San Diego Gophersnake was found entangled in synthetic "wildlife netting" used as a barrier to rodents and other pests. After freeing two snakes that were found entangled in the netting, the property owner removed the netting to protect the snakes.
© Osa Barbani
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This San Diego Gophersnake found in Orange County, was rescued after it was trapped in a tarp with small mesh that was used to cover backyard stuff. Snakes will try to crawl through any open mesh, not just that used in plastic netting.
© Stacy Schenkel |
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How to Tell the Difference Between Gophersnakes and Rattlesnakes |
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Harmless and beneficial gophersnakes are sometimes mistaken for dangerous rattlesnakes. Gophersnakes are often killed unnecessarily because of this confusion.
(It's also not necessary to kill every rattlesnake.)
It is easy to avoid this mistake by learning to tell the difference between the two families of snakes. The informational signs shown above can help to educate you about these differences. (Click to enlarge).
If you can't see enough detail on a snake to be sure it is not a rattlesnake or if you have any doubt that it is harmless, leave it alone.
You should never handle a snake unless you are absolutely sure that it is not dangerous.
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Habitat |
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Coastal San Diego County grassland habitat that is rapidly disappearing due to development. © Brian Hinds |
Habitat, Riverside County |
Habitat, small creek,
San Diego County |
Habitat, San Diego County
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Habitat,6,200 ft.
San Bernardino County
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Habitat, Riverside County |
Habitat, 3,000 ft., San Diego County |
Habitat, coastal San Diego County grassland |
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Coastal scrub habitat,
San Diego County |
Habitat, hill next to suburbs,
San Diego County |
Habitat, San Gabriel Mountains, Los Angeles County |
Habitat, San Diego County coastal scrub |
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Habitat, Santa Monica Mountains, Los Angeles County © Colin Byrne |
Habitat, riparian canyon,
Los Angeles County |
Habitat, Santa Ana Mountains,
Riverside County |
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Short Videos |
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A San Diego Gophersnake flicks its tongue and crawls across a dirt road. |
A San Diego Gopher snake is discovered on a dirt road in the morning. It becomes defensive when I follow it, hissing and striking out to warn me to back off. |
A distressed Pacific Gophersnake shakes its tail rapidly, which makes a buzzing sound as the tail touches the ground. This behavior might be a mimic of a rattlesnake's rattlng, or it could be a similar behavior that helps to warn off an animal that could be a threat to the gopher snake. |
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Description |
Not Dangerous - This snake does not have venom that can cause death or serious illness or injury in most humans.
Commonly described as "harmless" or "not poisonous" to indicate that its bite is not dangerous, but "not venomous" is more accurate. (A poisonous snake can hurt you if you eat it. A venomous snake can hurt you if it bites you.)
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Size |
Adults of the species Pituophis catenifer can be 2.5 - 9 feet long (76 - 279 cm). (Stebbins, 2003)
Hatchlings are fairly long, generally around 15 inches in length (38 cm).
Most adults of this subspecies, Pituophis catenifer annectens, are 4 - 5 ft. long (122 -152 cm.)
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Appearance |
A large snake with heavily keeled scales, a narrow head that is slightly wider than the neck, and a protruding rostral scale on the tip of the snout that is bluntly rounded. |
Color and Pattern |
Ground color is tan, light brown or yellowish, with large brown or blackish rounded blotches along the back and smaller markings on the sides.
The dorsal blotches can fuse together producing a very dark color.
The underside is cream to yellow with dark spots.
The back of the neck is often a dull orange.
There is usually a dark stripe across the head in front of the eyes and a dark stripe from behind each eye to the angle of the jaw.
Juveniles tend to have a darker and more compact pattern than adults.
Key to California gophersnake subspecies.
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Life History and Behavior |
Activity |
Active in the daytime, and at night in hot weather, and especially at dusk and dawn.
One of the most commonly seen snakes on roads and trails, especially in the spring when males are actively seeking a mate, and in the fall when hatchlings emerge.
A good burrower, climber, and swimmer. |
Defense |
When threatened, a gophersnake will do several things, sometimes one after the other, including: crawling away quickly to escape or hide; freezing up - making the body rigid and kinked up so it won't be noticed or perceived as a snake; and striking at the threat to scare it off. Gophersnakes also use a more dramatic defensive behavior - sometimes a snake will elevate its body and inflate it with air while flattening its head into a triangular shape, hissing loudly, and quickly shaking its tail back and forth to make a buzzing sound.
(This head-flattening and tail-rattling is usually considered to be a mimic of a rattlesnake, but the tail shaking could be a behavior similar to that of the rattlesnake that helps to warn off an animal that could be a threat to the snake by alerting it of the snake's presence.)
Gophersnakes have a specially-developed epiglottis which increases the sound of their hiss when air is forced through the glottis. You can listen to a recording of a gophersnake hissing here, and watch short movies of a gophersnake hissing and striking here, and shaking its tail here. |
Diet and Feeding |
Eats mostly small mammals, especially pocket gophers, moles, rabbits, and mice, along with birds and their eggs and nestlings. Occasionally eats lizards and insects.
A powerful constrictor; kills prey by suffocating them in body coils or by pressing the animal against the walls of their underground burrows. |
Reproduction |
Mating occurs in spring after emergence from winter hibernation.
Mating and egg laying occurs later at higher elevations in the mountains.
Females are oviparous, laying one to 2 clutches of 2-24 eggs from June - August. (Stebbins, 2003)
Eggs hatch in 2 - 2.5 months.
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Habitat |
Found in a variety of habitats - grassland, coastal sage scrub, agricultural lands, riparian areas, woodlands, and desert, from sea level to the mountains. Especially common in coastal areas.
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Geographical Range |
This subspecies, Pituophis catenifer annectens - San Diego Gophersnake, occurs in southern California - south of the range of P. c. catenifer on the south coast from Monterey County south on the inland side of the mountain ranges to Baja California. It also occurs on Santa Catalina Island. It is sympatric with P. c. affinis in a narrow range, but no intergrades have been found. It apparently intergrades with P. c. catenifer, and P. c. deserticola.
The species Pituophis catenifer - Gophersnake, occurs from southern Canada in British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan, south into Mexico, and east to Indiana and east Texas, excluding most of Arkansas, Minnesota, and North Dakota, and much of Illinois and Wisconsin. It is also found in the Channel Islands and on islands off the west coast of Baja California.
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Elevational Range |
Gophersnakes range from below sea level to around 9,186 ft. (2,800 m). (Stebbins, 2003)
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Notes on Taxonomy |
8 subspecies of Pituophis catenifer are recognized - 2 occur in Baja California, and 6 occur in the United States. It has been proposed that the snakes from Baja California are a new species. 5 of these 8 subspecies occur in California, with one endemic, and one that only occurs in California and Baja California.
Gophersnakes are related to Ratsnakes and Kingsnakes, and they have been known to interbreed with these species.
Alternate and Previous Names (Synonyms)
Pituophis catenifer annectens - Sonoran Gopher Snake (Stebbins 2003, Stebbins & McGinnis 2012)
Pituophis melanoleucus annectens - Sonoran Gopher Snake (Stebbins 1985)
Pituophis melanoleucus annectens - Sonora Gopher Snake (Stebbins 1966)
Pituophis catenifer annectens (Stebbins 1954)
Pituophis catenifer annectens - San Diego Gopher Snake (Baird and Girard, 1853)
Pituophis catenifer annectens - San Diegan Gopher Snake (Van Denburgh 1922)
Pituophis catenifer catenifer - Western Gopher Snake (Pituophis annectens; Pityophis Heermanni; Pityophis vertebralis; Pityophis sayi bellona, part; Pityophis sayi; Pituophis bellona, part; Pituophis melanoleucus; Pituophis melanoleucus var. catenifer. Pacific Bull Snake; Bellona Bull Snake; Western Bull Snake, part; Pacific Pine Snake; Gopher Snake, part; Say's Pine Snake; Yellow Gopher Snake) (Grinnell and Camp 1917)
Pacific bull snake (Ruthling 1915)
Coastal gopher snake
Gopher snake
Pacific gopher snake
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Conservation Issues (Conservation Status) |
A very common snake, but often mistaken for a rattlesnake due to a similarity in appearance and killed unnecessarily. Frequently killed by traffic when crossing roads. |
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Taxonomy |
Family |
Colubridae |
Colubrids |
Oppel, 1811 |
Genus |
Pituophis |
Bullsnakes, Gophersnakes, and Pinesnakes |
Holbrook, 1842 |
Species |
catenifer |
Gophersnake |
(Blainville, 1835) |
Subspecies
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annectens |
San Diego Gophersnake |
Baird and Girard, 1853 |
Original Description |
Pituophis catenifer - (Blainville, 1835) - Nouv. Ann. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, Vol. 4, p. 290, pl. 26, figs. 2-2b
Pituophis catenifer annectens - Baird and Girard, 1853 - Cat. N. Amer. Rept., Pt. 1, p. 72
from Original Description Citations for the Reptiles and Amphibians of North America © Ellin Beltz
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Meaning of the Scientific Name |
Pituophis - Greek - pitys- pine and ophis - snake - possibly referring to habitat of nominate subspecies on U.S. east coast (the Pine Snake)
catenifer - Latin - catena - chain and -ifera - bearing - referring to the dorsal pattern
annectens - Latin - joining or connecting
from Scientific and Common Names of the Reptiles and Amphibians of North America - Explained © Ellin Beltz
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Related or Similar California Snakes |
P. c. affinis -Sonoran Gophersnake
P. c. catenifer - Pacific Gophersnake
P. c. deserticola - Great Basin Gophersnake
P. c. pumilus - Santa Cruz Island Gophersnake
A. e. eburnata - Desert Glossy Snake
A. e. occidentalis - California Glossy Snake
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More Information and References |
California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Patrick Briggs' World Pituophis Site
Stebbins, Robert C., and McGinnis, Samuel M. Field Guide to Amphibians and Reptiles of California: Revised Edition (California Natural History Guides) University of California Press, 2012.
Stebbins, Robert C. California Amphibians and Reptiles. The University of California Press, 1972.
Flaxington, William C. Amphibians and Reptiles of California: Field Observations, Distribution, and Natural History. Fieldnotes Press, Anaheim, California, 2021.
Samuel M. McGinnis and Robert C. Stebbins. Peterson Field Guide to Western Reptiles & Amphibians. 4th Edition. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 2018.
Stebbins, Robert C. A Field Guide to Western Reptiles and Amphibians. 3rd Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company, 2003.
Behler, John L., and F. Wayne King. The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Reptiles and Amphibians. Alfred A. Knopf, 1992.
Powell, Robert., Joseph T. Collins, and Errol D. Hooper Jr. A Key to Amphibians and Reptiles of the Continental United States and Canada. The University Press of Kansas, 1998.
Bartlett, R. D. & Patricia P. Bartlett. Guide and Reference to the Snakes of Western North America (North of Mexico) and Hawaii. University Press of Florida, 2009.
Bartlett, R. D. & Alan Tennant. Snakes of North America - Western Region. Gulf Publishing Co., 2000.
Brown, Philip R. A Field Guide to Snakes of California. Gulf Publishing Co., 1997.
Ernst, Carl H., Evelyn M. Ernst, & Robert M. Corker. Snakes of the United States and Canada. Smithsonian Institution Press, 2003.
Taylor, Emily. California Snakes and How to Find Them. Heyday, Berkeley, California. 2024.
Wright, Albert Hazen & Anna Allen Wright. Handbook of Snakes of the United States and Canada. Cornell University Press, 1957.
Joseph Grinnell and Charles Lewis Camp. A Distributional List of the Amphibians and Reptiles of California. University of California Publications in Zoology Vol. 17, No. 10, pp. 127-208. July 11, 1917.
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