Snakes come in an incredible variety of colors and patterns. As is the case with the Western Rattlesnake, Crotalus viridis, shown at the left, often the colors and patterns serve to camouflage the snake. Other times bright colors and patterns make the snake more clearly visible, so that other animals will see it and stay away.
Other adaptations are peculiar to individual groups of snakes or species. Rattlesnakes have rattles on their tail that can be shaken to make a very loud and disconcerting warning sound. North America's two members of the Slender Blind Snake Family burrow beneath the ground feeding largely on termites and ants, and have no eyes which could get dirt in them and aren't useful underground anyway. Common Garter Snakes are equipped with glands that exude a very smelly substance when the snake is disturbed.
Western Hognose Snake, Heterodon nasicus, image courtesy of US Fish & Wildlife ServiceSome of the most interesting snake adaptations are behavioral. At the right you see a rather common North American species, the Western Hognose Snake, Heterodon nasicus. Though hognose snakes are about as harmless as snakes get, as the picture shows, they can spread their heads so that they look much larger than they are. Moreover, as they do this, they hiss! If this doesn't scare you away, suddenly they'll change strategies. They'll flip onto their backs and with their mouths wide open writhe pitifully, as if having convulsions. Then they'll just lie there, looking dead as can be. But if you sit down next to them and be quiet, in a few minutes they'll raise their head, look around and, if it looks safe, slither away!
Gray Rat Snake, Elaphe obsoleta, image by Kenneth Myron Bonnell in Greenville, MississippiAt the left you see an extraordinary adaptation of one of eastern North America's most common snakes, the Rat Snake, Elaphe obsoleta. Rat Snakes can climb right up tree trunks! It does this because among its food are birds and eggs. How do Rat Snakes climb trees? If you hold a Rat Snake you will see that in cross section it is shaped like a loaf of bread -- a rounded top with straight sides meeting the flat bottom at more or less right angles. Those squared sides pressed against a tree's bark irregularities give the snake a bit of hold, kind of like a tire with a good tread holds to the road better than a smooth tire. But it's not a very firm hold. Rat Snakes fall out of trees a lot, and that can be very surprising if you happen to be daydreaming below!