The eastern milk snake (Lampropeltis
triangulum) is the only member in Chicago Wilderness
of the group of constrictors called "king snakes."
Constrictors kill their prey by asphyxiation. King snakes
get their name because they often kill and eat other species
of snakes, including venomous species such as rattlesnakes.
In Chicago Wilderness, the eastern
milk snake may make a meal of DeKay's brown snakes (Storeria
dekayi), red-bellied snakes (Storeria occipitomaculata),
or eastern garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis).
The eastern milk snake is the most widespread and variable
species of king snake, ranging from southeast Canada,
west to the Rocky Mountains, and south to northern and
western parts of South America.
The eastern milk snake is a medium-sized
species and grows to a length of about three feet. It
has smooth, often shiny scales. In the Chicago region,
individuals normally are tan in color, with reddish-brown
blotches bordered by black. The belly is usually whitish
with black spots, which form a rough checkerboard pattern.
Milk snakes mate in the spring. In
summer, they lay up to about 20 eggs in decomposing vegetation,
hollow logs, or similar humid, warm spots. The eggs hatch
in about 60 days, and the hatchlings are usually around
ten inches in length.
Appropriately, there is a dietary
story behind the common name of our local king snake.
Besides its occasional taste for reptilian prey
as well as frogs, fish, birds, and eggs the milk
snake avidly hunts small mammals such as mice and voles.
After European settlement of North America, the milk snake's
searches for these rodents soon brought it into close
quarters with humans. Milk snakes were undoubtedly drawn
to mice that foraged on waste grain, and there they found
shelter in barns and other farm buildings. Humans who
encountered milk snakes in their barns creatively imagined
that these creatures came to milk the cows, hence the
name "milk" snake. In the Chicago Wilderness
region, milk snakes are still found in and around some
remaining farm sites.
A look at the milk snake's local distribution
and habitat suggests that while early farmers may have
viewed it as a rogue cow milker intruding on their barns,
the snake was actually hosting the farmers on its home
turf. While Lampropeltis triangulum is not rare in our
urbanizing region, most local herpetologists note a correlation
between its scattered populations and remnant oak savanna
groves, especially those on gravelly, morainal ridges.
These open woodlots are transitional ecosystems lying
between the open grasslands and the more closed-canopy
forest. Milk snakes are rarely found on wet soils and
seem to prefer the gravelly or rocky soil of these low
but dry hills. They probably also use the mix of shade
and sun found in savannas to regulate body temperature.
As our region was settled in the 19th
century, farmers preferred to build their farmsteads on
these same savannas, especially those on the drier ridges,
while they converted the surrounding and often wet prairies
into row crops or used them to graze cattle for the once-important
dairy farms. The resident milk snakes simply capitalized
on the nearby mix of cover and food that the new settlements
provided. While many farmers probably loathed the presence
of these reptiles, the snakes provided them an important
service by regulating mouse populations on the farms.
Milk snakes are secretive and fairly
difficult to find together in any number, even where sizable
populations are known to occur. Many local conservation
agencies have acquired savannas, often in the form of
vacated farm sites, where milk snakes persist. In these
preserves, visitors may encounter milk snakes under wood,
tin, cattle tanks, or other debris left over from the
farms. Milk snakes are non-venomous. While individuals
may bite in defense when captured, they are harmless to
humans.
The milk snake's close relationship
with Chicago farms has greatly diminished over the last
century. But as restoration efforts continue, these interesting
animals should rightfully reclaim their original role
as indicators of the savanna heritage of Chicago Wilderness.
Michael Redmer
To get involved with amphibian and reptile
monitoring, call (847) 965-1150.