The Hibernating Snakes of Arizona

Arizona snakes sun bathe for several hours, even when hibernating.
••• NA/AbleStock.com/Getty Images

Snakes cannot regulate their body temperature, so they depend on the climate temperature to do it for them. Snakes hibernate in any climate where temperatures drop below freezing for long time periods. In warmer places like Arizona, snakes don't hibernate as long as they do in colder climates, but they also go into summer hibernation to protect themselves from extreme heat and food shortage. Almost all Arizona snakes hibernate at some point.

Common Arizona Snakes

Arizona has a wide variety of snakes classified by their appearance, distribution, habitat or venom capabilities. Rattlesnakes,Gopher, Coral and King snakes typically avoid moist habitats, so Arizona's dry deserts, mountain areas and light woods provide an appropriate home for them. Gopher snakes hibernate during the harshest weeks of Arizona's winter and summer, during the night and day, respectively, depending on the part of the state. Aquatic garter snakes also live in Arizona's rivers, ponds and cattle water tanks, at times.

Where They Hibernate

Snakes typically don't store up fat before hibernating, as mammals do, because their body temperatures aren't regulated metabolically, like mammals. Snakes find dens in hollow tree stumps or, especially in the Arizona desert where land is often open and sparse, in holes in the ground or underneath rock piles, like rattlesnakes. Dens are typically located near sunny spots, usually on a south-facing slope. Since these spots are rare in the Arizona desertscape, 100 to 200 rattlesnakes may live in the same den. Snakes return to the same den each year, even baby snakes who've never been to the den, perhaps following scent trails from fellow snakes.

Hibernating Behavior

Snakes go into a state called "torpor" during hibernation. Where mammals store food and slow their metabolic rate during hibernation, snakes simply go into a slow, lethargic state, not feeding or mating during the winter months. However, Arizona's typically warm, sunny winter days attract the snakes to come out and warm in the sun for several hours, usually on warm rocks.

Summer Hibernation

In hot areas like Arizona, certain desert snakes, like rattlesnakes, go into a summertime torpor, or aestivation. The snakes burrow underground during the hottest summer weeks, when temperatures sore well between 100 and 120, depending on the location and time of year. Cottonmouth snakes also aestivate during the hottest, driest weeks when prey is scarce. Snakes may come out during the evening when temperatures are bearable, as the Arizona gopher snake does.

Related Articles

The Snake Hibernation Period
What Do Rattle Snake Dens Look Like?
Difference Between a Garter & Garden Snake
The Common Snakes of Oklahoma
Identification of Snakes in Georgia
The Adaptations of Gerbils
Snakes of Northwest Arizona
What Kind of Environment Does a Cheetah Live In?
Aggressive Snakes in Texas
How to Identify a Copperhead Vs. a Milk Snake
How to Identify Baby Rattlesnakes
Salamanders' Natural Habitat
The Types of Snakes Found in East Tennessee
Snakes Found in Northern Illinois
How Do Snakes Mate?
How Do Snakes Lay Eggs?
Poisonous & Nonpoisonous Snakes
How to Identify the Copperhead
Egg-Eating Snakes in Texas
Hedgehog Adaptation

Dont Go!

We Have More Great Sciencing Articles!