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RATTLESNAKE . Rattlesnakes are a small See also: group of the sub-See also: family of pit-vipers (Crotalinae, see See also: SNAKES; Viperidae), characterised by a tail which terminates in a chain of horny, loosely connected rings, the so-called " rattle
.
" The "pit " by which the family is distinguished from the ordinary vipers is a deep depression in the integument of the sides of the snout, between the nostrils and the See also: eye; its physiological See also: function is unknown
.
The rattle is a complicated and highly specialized See also: organ, See also: developed from the See also: simple conical See also: scale or epidermal spine, which in the majority of snakes forms the termination of the general integument of the tail
.
The See also: bone by which the See also: root of the rattle is supported consists of the last caudal vertebrae, from three to eight in number, which are enlarged, dilated, compressed and coalesced (fig
.
1, a)
.
This bone is covered
a
4
1
.
Caudal vertebrae, the last coalesced in a single bone a
.
2
.
End of tail (rattle removed); a, cuticular See also: matrix covering terminal bone. a
.
See also: Side view of a rattle; c and d the See also: oldest, a and b the youngest See also: joints
.
4
.
A rattle with joints disconnected; x fits into b and is covered by it; z into d in like manner . with thick and vascular cutis, transversely divided by two constrictions into three portions, of which the proximal is larger than the median, and the median much larger than the distal . This cuticular portion constitutes the matrix of a horny epidermoid covering which closely fits the shape of the under-lying soft See also: part and is the beginning of the rattle, as it appears in See also: young rattlesnakes before they have See also: shed their skin for the first See also: time
.
When the See also: period of a renewal of the skin approaches a new covering of the extremity of the tail is formed below the old one, but the latter, instead of being cast off with the See also: remainder of the epidermis, is retained by the posterior swelling of the end of the tail, forming now the first loose joint of the rattle
.
This See also: process is repeated on succeeding moultingsthe new joints being always larger than the old ones as long as the snake grows
.
Perfect rattles therefore taper towards the point, but generally the oldest (terminal) joints See also: wear away in time and are lost
.
As rattlesnakes shed their skins more than once every See also: year, the number of joints of the rattle does not indicate the age of the animal but the number of exuviations which it has undergone
.
The largest rattle in the See also: British Museum has twenty-one joints
.
The rattle consists thus of a variable number of dry, hard, horny cup-shaped joints, each of which loosely grasps a portion of the preceding, and all of which are capable of being shaken against each other
.
If the interspaces between the joints are filled with See also: water, as often happens in wet weather, no noise can be produced
.
The motor power lies in the lateral muscles of the tail, by which a vibratory motion is communicated to the rattle, the noise produced being similar to that of a See also: child's rattle and perceptible at a distance of from ro to 20 yds
.
The habit of agitating the tail is not See also: peculiar to the rattlesnake, but has been observed in other venomous and innocuous snakes with the ordinary tail, under the influence of fear or anger
.
It is significant that the tip of such snakes is sometimes rather conspicuously coloured and covered with peculiarly modified scales, notably in Acanthophis . The use of such a tail probably consists in attracting or fixing the See also: attention of small animals, by slightly raising and vibrating the tip
.
The rattle no doubt acts as a warning, every snake preferring being See also: left alone to being forced to bite
.
Many a See also: man has been warned in time by the shrill See also: sound, and this principle applies undoubtedly to other
mammals
.
Moreover, rattlesnakes are rather sluggish, and comparatively not vicious
.
First they try to slink away; when overtaken or cornered they use every means of frightening the foe by swelling up, puffing, rattling and threatening attitudes; it is as a See also: rule not until they are touched, or provoked by a rapid See also: movement, that they retaliate, but then they strike with fury
.
They are viviparous, and as destroyers of rats, mice and other small rodents they are useful
.
The surest way of clearing a ground of them and any other snakes is to drive in pigs, which are sure to find and to eat them, without harm to themselves
.
They inhabit localities to which the See also: sun has See also: free See also: access, prairies, rough stony ground, &c
.
Specimens of 5 ft. in length are not rare
.
Formerly See also: common in the eastern parts of the See also: United States, and still so in thinly inhabited districts, rattlesnakes, like the vipers of See also: Europe, have gradually succumbed to the persecution of man
.
Rattlesnakes are confined to the New See also: World
.
See also: North-See also: American authors distinguish a See also: great number of different kinds, S
.
W
.
Garman (" Reptiles and Batrachians of North See also: America," Harvard See also: Mus
.
Zool
.
Mem., 1883, 4to) enumerating twelve See also: species and thirteen additional varieties
.
E
.
D
.
See also: Cope has split them into twenty; but all these species or varieties fall into two See also: groups
.
One, Sistrurus, has the upper side of the See also: head covered with the ordinary nine See also: shields; only three species, of comparatively small See also: size. in North America(Sistrurus miliarius from See also: Florida to Sonora; S. catenatus in many of the See also: middle states.of the Union, and elsewhere, as far north as Michigan; S. ravus in Mexico)
.
The second group forms the genus Crotalus, in which the shields between and behind the eyes are broken up and replaced by small scales
.
This genus ranges throughout the United States through Central and See also: South America into See also: Patagonia, but is not represented on any of the West See also: Indian islands
.
C. horridus, with the tail uniformly black, from Maine to Kansas and See also: Louisiana to Florida
.
C. adamanteus, tail See also: light, with black crossbands, See also: body with a See also: hand-some See also: pattern of rhombs with lighter centres and yellowish edges; chiefly south-eastern states, to Arizona and Mexico; the largest of rattlers, giants of 8 ft. in length having been recorded
.
C'. confluentus, tail with See also: brown or indistinct bands; with a continuous series of large brown or reddish rhomboidal spots on the back;
See also: Texas to California
.
C. cerastes, with a pair of horns above the eyes; the " sidewinder " of Arizona and California to See also: Nevada
.
C. terrificus, easily distinguished by the possession of three pairs of symmetrical shields on the top of the muzzle, ranging from Arizona into See also: Argentina
.
It is the only kind of rattlesnake in Central and South America
.
C. triseriatus, a small species, with a feebly developed rattle, on Mexican mountains, on the pic of See also: Orizaba up to 12,500 ft
.
(ST G
.
M.; H
.
F
.
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rattle snakes get their name by the rattling of thier tail
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