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  1. Triceratops horridus skull on display in the North Dakota Industrial Commission office building in Bismarck. Skull was collected in Slope County from U. S. Forest Service-Dakota Prairie Grasslands …

  2. one of the two ratlesnake species in Wisconsin. Habitat: In Wisconsin, timber ratlesnakes are almost exclusively associated with the steep, rocky, rugged, and relatively remote, uninhabited blufs, and …

  3. We examined the diet and foraging behavior of C. horridus from four separate populations in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. A total of 253 prey items from scat samples, stomach samples, and …

  4. Sampling Timber rattlesnakes (Crotalus horridus): phenology, growth, intimidation, survival, and a syndrome of undetermined origin in a northern population. Pages 235-256 in W.K. Hayes, K.R. …

  5. FL Status: none Description: A medium to large, heavy-bodied, venomous snake with dark brown to black zigzag bands (chevrons) on back, a pinkish-brown to gray ground color (often with a rusty mid …

  6. Timber rattlesnakes (Crotalus horridus) are easily distinguished from other snakes in Pennsylvania. Timber rattlesnakes are stout-bodied, large snakes reaching lengths of up to 5 feet.

  7. These included studies of organized rattlesnake hunts, the effect of translocation on C. horridus, the genetic structure of selected C. horridus populations, and an assessment of the characteristics of C. …