The Microhabitat Preferences Based on Relative Density and Stream Assessment of Regina septemvittata in a small West Virginia Stream

Authors

  • Nicoleena Storer West Liberty University
  • Justin Sanclemente West Liberty University
  • Brian Ringhiser West Liberty University
  • Zachary Loughman West Liberty University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55632/pwvas.v94i1.913

Abstract

Regina septemvittata is a slim-bodied water snake in the family Natricidae that is native to the northeastern United States. Being the only species to consume exclusively freshly molted crayfish, R. septemvittata is categorized as a specialist. The selectivity of prey suggests possible other narrow range preferences including refuge and hunting locations. This study is being conducted in the North Fork of Short Creek in Ohio County, WV. In addition, Nerodia sipedon sipedon is also found within the study stream system. N. s. Sipedon is a generalist water snake species that has been shown to be larger and more aggressive than R. septemvittata. Both species are captured throughout their activity period, April - November, starting in 2018. In addition to environmental and morphological data being recorded at the time of collection, qualitative habitat evaluation indexes (QHEI) were recorded at the initiation of the project. QHEI allows for a more standardized evaluation of the quality of the stream system. The combination of the quality of the stream in 100-meter sections of the stream in addition to snake location data can show relative preferences of R. septemvittata throughout the stream system. The current data suggests a greater preference for disturbed habitat as well as a higher frequency of hot spots in the stream as opposed to their generalist counterparts N. s. sipedon. 

Author Biographies

Nicoleena Storer, West Liberty University

Department of Organismal Biology, Ecology and Zoo Science, B.S.

Justin Sanclemente, West Liberty University

Department of Organismal Biology, Ecology and Zoo Science

Brian Ringhiser, West Liberty University

Department of Organismal Biology, Ecology and Zoo Science, B.S.

Zachary Loughman, West Liberty University

Department of Organismal Biology, Ecology and Zoo Science, Ph.D. 

References

Gibbons, J. W., & Dorcas, M. E. (2004). North American watersnakes: a natural history (Vol. 8).

University of Oklahoma Press.

Gripshover, N. D., & Jayne, B. C. (2021). Crayfish Eating in Snakes: Testing How Anatomy and

Behavior Affect Prey Size and Feeding Performance. Integrative Organismal Biology, 3(1), obab001.

Mitchell, J. C. (1994). An unusually colored northern water snake (Nerodia sipedon sipedon)

from Giles County, Virginia. Banisteria (4), 32-33.

USDA. (2018). Regina septemvittata. Science base cataloge.

https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/59f5ebd1e4b063d5d307e1b3. [ 2021, September 4th]

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Published

2022-04-22

How to Cite

Storer, N., Sanclemente, J., Ringhiser, B., & Loughman, Z. . (2022). The Microhabitat Preferences Based on Relative Density and Stream Assessment of Regina septemvittata in a small West Virginia Stream. Proceedings of the West Virginia Academy of Science, 94(1). https://doi.org/10.55632/pwvas.v94i1.913

Issue

Section

Meeting Abstracts-Poster