Photos Of Black Rat Snake Caught In Net Trap

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Steve Kroenke
Posts: 4342
Joined: Fri Nov 28, 2003 6:49 pm
Location: Louisiana/Logansport

Photos Of Black Rat Snake Caught In Net Trap

In 2005, Bob and I did not catch a single rat snake in our net traps made from bird netting. Well, the ?spell? has been broken and I caught one at around 7:30 pm on May 4, 2006. I was able to watch the entire process of ensnarement!

I was watching my martins when I kept seeing one of my bluebirds flying around the colony and emitting the ?terrestrial? predator alarm call. This is a ?clucking? chatter that bluebirds make when their deadly enemy the rat snake is nearby or trying to predate their nest. Bluebirds emit an entirely different alarm call at the approach of an avian predator like an Accipiter hawk. This call is more of a high pitch ?whistle? and the martins go into ?spasms? and flee. The terrestrial predator call does not produce the same effect on the martins.

I finally looked at the bottom of my new Deluxe rack with 18 Troyer horizontal gourds and I gasped! There he/she was, a beautiful black rat snake looking like a black rope that was climbing the bottom of the pole and heading directly for my net trap. I walked over and saw the snake?s narrow head weaving into the ? inch mesh and I knew he/she would be caught. With strong muscular movements, the snake pushed itself through the mesh. The snake was about 4 feet long and thick in girth. However, the ? mesh will catch enough of the snake?s body so that he/she can?t go forward or back out because the thin mesh will catch the scales. The snake only got about 8 inches into the mesh before being hopelessly entangled and unable to extricate itself. Gotcha!

The martins ignored the snake that far down on the pole and don?t really notice predators like snakes unless they are farther up the poles or on gourd crossbars, gourds or the houses.

I hollered at Bob and we removed the snake from the mesh. I grabbed the head and Bob pull the snake?s tail straight out. The snake immediately made a ?smelly deposit? of snake poop and also emitted a musky anti-predator odor. However, this defense does not work with hawks and owls which have a poor sense of smell. I cut the mesh from the snake?s body easily since he/she had just become entangled. The longer the snake remains in the mesh, the more he/she becomes ensnared and more difficult to cut out. Also, if the snake stays too long, he/she can die from exhaustion or from sun exposure.

I took the snake several miles down the road and released him unharmed. I don?t kill snakes caught in my traps.

I would encourage everyone to install some kind of snake guards on your housing poles, particularly folks living in the Deep South.

I included two photos. One shows the snake just beginning to weave through the netting. The second photo is a close up of the snake and trap. Notice the numerous mesh squares and how the snake is entangled. It is an almost perfect snake catching system.

Steve


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Last edited by Steve Kroenke on Fri May 05, 2006 10:30 am, edited 3 times in total.
stan davison
Posts: 715
Joined: Thu Feb 17, 2005 7:48 pm
Location: Tulsa Oklahoma

Hey Steve where can i get that netting? Thanks.
Steve Kroenke
Posts: 4342
Joined: Fri Nov 28, 2003 6:49 pm
Location: Louisiana/Logansport

Hey Stan,

You can get the bird netting at most home improvement stores like Lowes or Home Depot or at garden centers. I included another close up photo showing the rat snake entangled in the mesh squares.

There are rat snakes in Oklahoma so please install, if you haven't, some kind of snake guard on your martin housing.

Steve
Guest

No pic here just 2 squares with red X's

darn!!!!!
Steve Kroenke
Posts: 4342
Joined: Fri Nov 28, 2003 6:49 pm
Location: Louisiana/Logansport

Dick,

This sometimes happens when I use another website to transfer my photos. Right click over where the photo should be and click show picture. This usually works. If there is a problem with the other website, then the photos may not always show up. I am seeing the photos at this time.

Steve
John Atteberry

Hello Steve,
That is a head's up call to report to landlords that don't have any kind of predator gaurd up!!! I wonder if he could of went up a 4 foot PVC pipe? That is what I'm using this year because the 3 inch PVC pipe that my bluebirds use with the nest box on the pipe, I never had a snake go up and get the birds in the two nest's of babies last year! I haven't had any snakes soo far go up the PVC 4 inch pipes!!! I keep them clean and waxed for slippery surfaces after it rains and when I mow the grass! That should be all that you can do to make it stay slippery! I keep an eye out every evening to see if I can catch a snake trying or going up the pipe but haven't seen any!! So everyone better get ready for the snakes and make sure you have the gaurds up!
I have some unrelated questions about what I experienced last week when I told you about my favorite pair of ASY martins! I lost the ASY female and the ASY male came back for two days to look for her. I took out the cold eggs on the second day and he came back and tried for two more days to get a female to stay! He had an SY female go in with him but she never returned and he waited for two more days and dissappeared too! What happened? Did he find a mate at another site or did he just leave because he couldn't do it anymore, nesting that is? Will he come back again next year to nest here?
Now as of today I lost another ASY female that had five eggs too and the ASY male has an SY female go in with him yesterday and was here today too! So maybe they will start another nest together! Thanks for your expertise!!!! John!
Steve Kroenke
Posts: 4342
Joined: Fri Nov 28, 2003 6:49 pm
Location: Louisiana/Logansport

Hey John,

The PVC 4 inch pipe probably will keep most snakes at bay as long as you keep the surface slick and free of debris which could provide some traction. You have the gray rat snake and corn snake (red rat snake) in your area. Most of these fall in the 3 to 4 foot range, but on occasion I have seen a Grandaddy size of about 5 feet! Just as a precautionary measure you may still want to install some netting above your PVC guard. Something to think about.

Several things could have happened to the ASY male. First, he may have been caught by a Cooper?s hawk since these Accipiters do nest in your area. Resident Cooper?s hawks were a big problem for my martin colonies in the Tallahassee area. Perhaps the other ASY female met the same fate. Also, you will be surprised at how dangerous martins live at times! They often land in the middle of highways or roads possibly in search of grit to aid in digestion. Martins are not that fast on take off and will often allow a vehicle to be up real close before flying. I have seen martins killed on our road this year. Bob, who is a truck driver, saw four or five martins just sitting in the middle of a busy highway the other day and he had to slow down to avoid hitting them! So, both your martins may have been killed by vehicles. And the ASY male may have indeed tried his luck at another nearby colony where there may be more available females. It is getting late in your area though I had martins breed as late as the third week in May when I lived in the Tallahassee area. I doubt he would have given up completely at this date. If he found another mate at another site and bred, he would most likely return to that colony next year.

Your other ASY male was a lucky bird! Yes, they have time to raise a family. I had a female martin that apparently died during egg laying recently. I found her dead in the nest with two eggs. The male now has recruited a new mate and hopefully they will be successful.

Good luck.

Steve
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