Reward Offered for Sighting of South Florida Rainbow Snake

Feds May Have Prematurely Declared Species Extinct; Reward Intended to Spur 
Rediscovery, 
Protection

TAMPA, Fla.— The Center for Biological Diversity and the Center for Snake 
Conservation announced 
today that they are offering a $500 reward for the first person to document the 
existence of the 
South Florida rainbow snake. Both conservation organizations believe that the 
U.S. Fish and Wildlife 
Service last month prematurely declared the species extinct without conducting 
targeted surveys 
and despite several unconfirmed sightings.

“Declaring the South Florida rainbow snake extinct without adequate search 
effort is scientifically 
irresponsible,” said Cameron Young, executive director of the Center for Snake 
Conservation. “We 
hope that by offering a reward, we can rediscover this amazing reptile and 
implement conservation 
measures to ensure its survival into the future.”

The South Florida rainbow snake is a harmless aquatic snake that feeds 
exclusively on the 
American eel. It is known from just three specimens, the last of which was 
collected in 1952 near 
Fisheating Creek in Glades County, Fla. In early October, the Service declared 
the snake extinct, 
thereby denying it protections under the Endangered Species Act. The Service 
made its 
determination without conducting any focused surveys for the reclusive reptile 
and despite 
anecdotal evidence of snakes eating eels in the Fisheating Creek area.

“It’s heart-wrenching to think the South Florida rainbow snake could be lost 
forever,” said Collette 
Adkins Giese, a Center for Biological Diversity attorney focused on the 
protection of imperiled 
reptiles and amphibians. “But if we can find these snakes, they’d be very 
likely to get protection 
under the Endangered Species Act — the most powerful tool in the country for 
saving plants and 
animals from extinction.”

The Service announced the extinction of the South Florida rainbow snake in 
response to a petition 
filed by the Center for Biological Diversity seeking Endangered Species Act 
protection for the snake 
and more than 400 other aquatic species in the southeastern United States. If 
rediscovered, the 
rainbow snake would receive an in-depth scientific review along with 374 
species from the petition 
(including 114 in Florida), which the Service found may warrant protection 
under Act.

Background
The South Florida rainbow snake (Farancia erytrogramma seminola) is a 
subspecies of rainbow 
snake known only from a single population in Fisheating Creek, which flows into 
the western side 
of Lake Okeechobee. Fisheating Creek remains relatively pristine and could 
still support the 
snakes. But potential habitat in other parts of Florida has been severely 
degraded by 
channelization and pollution, especially agricultural runoff. The snake is 
believed to be nearly 
entirely aquatic and active only at night, making detection difficult without 
extensive and 
specialized survey effort, although there were multiple unconfirmed sightings 
of the snake in the 
late 1980s. It’s a beautiful animal, with three red stripes along its 
iridescent bluish-black back and 
a belly that is yellow and red with black spots on each scale. Adult snakes can 
be over four feet 
long.

Snakes and other reptiles are among the most imperiled vertebrate species on 
the planet. Globally, 
nearly one-quarter of all evaluated reptile species are endangered or 
vulnerable to extinction, 
according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s 2011 Red 
List. Also, scientists 
currently lack sufficient information to assess the status of nearly 20 percent 
of the world’s 
reptiles. Many species are disappearing faster than scientists can study them.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation 
organization with more 
than 320,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection of 
endangered species and 
wild places.

The Center for Snake Conservation is a nonprofit organization whose mission is 
to promote the 
conservation of snakes and their natural ecosystems and implement positive 
change in human 
attitudes towards snakes. 

Contact:        Collette Adkins Giese, Center for Biological Diversity, (651) 
955-3821
Cameron A. Young, Center for Snake Conservation, (770) 500-0000

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