Aesculapian Snake
A large, slender non-venomous European colubrid named for the staff of Asclepius, the ancient Greek god of medicine.
54 snakes ending with the letter E — each with origin, classification, and notes.
This page lists snakes that end with E. 54 snakes are detailed below. Each entry below is a doorway into a full profile — not just a name on a list.
A large, slender non-venomous European colubrid named for the staff of Asclepius, the ancient Greek god of medicine.
A slender, leaf-green tree snake of South and Southeast Asia with binocular vision and a delicate pointed snout.
A spectacular Southeast Asian elapid with deep blue flanks, a red head and tail, and venom glands stretching a quarter of its body length.
A nocturnal Indo-Pacific colubrid notorious for invading Guam and devastating the island's native bird fauna.
A large constrictor of the North American Great Plains that hisses loudly and rattles its tail when threatened, often mistaken for a rattlesnake.
A small, harmless North American snake with three pale stripes down a dark back, one of the most familiar wild snakes on the continent.
A widespread brightly ringed neotropical elapid with potent neurotoxic venom, common in moist forests across Central and northern South America.
A handsome orange-and-red North American rat snake long popular in herpetoculture as a beginner-friendly pet.
A handsome chain-patterned North American constrictor that hunts and eats other snakes, including rattlesnakes.
A non-venomous European water snake with a peppered "dice" pattern, hunting fish almost exclusively in clean streams and lakes.
A stocky, mildly venomous snake of Asian mangrove swamps with a blunt dog-like snout suited to hunting in muddy water.
A tiny, irritable Florida rattlesnake whose rattle is so small that it sounds more like an insect buzz than a warning.
An aggressive, slim Australian elapid responsible for most snakebite deaths on the continent and possessing the world's second-most toxic venom.
A small, slender, red-yellow-and-black ringed elapid of the American Southeast with extremely potent neurotoxic venom.
The largest rattlesnake in the world, a heavy-bodied pit viper of the longleaf pine ecosystems of the American Southeast.
The longest native snake in the United States, a glossy blue-black colubrid that preys on venomous snakes in the southeastern coastal plain.
A South American colubrid that mimics the bold red-and-black ringed pattern of true coral snakes but is harmless to humans.
A heavy-bodied neotropical pit viper responsible for most snakebite injuries in Central and South America.
The most widely distributed land snake on Earth, a tiny blind burrower spread by potted plants and parthenogenetic reproduction.
A small striped North American natricine snake found in nearly every habitat across the continent, harmless and often kept as a beginner pet.
A sand-coloured nocturnal constrictor of the American Southwest, named for the polished sheen of its smooth scales.
A large, harmless European water snake with a yellow collar behind the head, famous for playing dead when seriously threatened.
A stout, upturned-snouted North American colubrid famous for hissing, flattening its neck, and then playing dead when bluffing fails.
A slim, climbing colubrid endemic to Japan, widely encountered around traditional wooden houses where it hunts rats and roosting birds.
A heavy, broad-headed Australian elapid also known as the mulga snake, with the largest venom yield of any Australian snake.
A widespread North American constrictor renowned for eating other snakes, including venomous rattlesnakes and copperheads, to which it is immune.
A small, secretive Midwestern North American natricine snake that lives almost entirely in burrows beneath wet meadows and is now seriously declining.
A slim Mediterranean colubrid with a sharply pointed snout, racing through dry scrub and stone walls at remarkable speed.
A small, mildly venomous rear-fanged snake of southwestern North American canyons, named for the V-shaped lyre marking on the head.
A striking black-and-yellow Southeast Asian colubrid with rear fangs, found coiled in low branches over tidal estuaries.
A widely distributed, brightly banded constrictor whose mimicry of coral snakes inspired the famous "red touches black, friend of Jack" rhyme.
A green-tinged desert rattlesnake of the American Southwest whose venom mixes hemorrhagic and powerful neurotoxic components.
A small, vertically pupilled North American colubrid often mistaken for a baby rattlesnake but armed only with mildly toxic rear-fang saliva.
A heavy, banded non-venomous water snake of eastern North America, frequently misidentified as a cottonmouth and killed by mistake.
A large, curious Indo-Pacific marine elapid often encountered on coral reefs, approaching divers without aggression but bearing potent venom.
A long, slim, alert Asian colubrid often kept by snake charmers, beneficial around villages for controlling rats and rodents.
A slim, harmless North American water snake that specialises almost entirely on freshly moulted crayfish.
A large, climbing, non-venomous constrictor of eastern North America that hunts rodents in barns, attics, and bird boxes.
A long, thin striped garter-snake relative that hunts frogs along the edges of clean ponds and streams in eastern North America.
A small, slate-grey North American snake with a vivid orange neck ring and belly, often found under logs and flat stones.
A slim emerald-green arboreal colubrid of the eastern United States that hunts caterpillars and spiders in low foliage.
A small, slim European colubrid with mirror-smooth scales, scarce and protected across most of its northern range.
A boldly banded Australian elapid of cool, wet southern habitats, responsible for a steady share of the country's serious snakebites.
A large, heavy-bodied rattlesnake of eastern North American hardwood forests, calm by nature and culturally important in colonial American history.
A small, high-altitude rattlesnake of the sky-island pine forests on the U.S.-Mexico border, with a row of paired dark blotches along the back.
A small Venezuelan rattlesnake of dry savanna habitats, named for the Uracoa River in Monagas state.
A large, agile climber of Korean and Russian forests, also called the Russian rat snake, valued by snake enthusiasts for its cool-temperate hardiness.
A slim, brown American tree snake with an extraordinary pointed snout, hunting lizards in the foliage of dry forests from Mexico to Argentina.
A harmless European water snake that mimics the adder's zig-zag pattern as a defence against predators.
The most widespread rattlesnake in the American Southwest, responsible for a large share of snakebites across the desert states.
A small, upturned-snouted prairie snake popular as a pet, famous for puffing up dramatically and then playing dead.
A long, slim, fast-moving Australian colubrid renowned for chasing prey over open ground at impressive speed.
A tiny, pink-bellied burrower of eastern North American woodlands that looks more like an earthworm than a typical snake.
A fully pelagic marine elapid found drifting in open ocean across most of the Indian and Pacific, the most widely distributed snake in the world.
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