(blue) The contiguous area of the previous
nominotypical subspecies,
Zamenis longissimus longissimus, which is now the only recognized
monotypic form, covers most of France except in the north (up to about the latitude of Paris), the
Spanish Pyrenees and the eastern side of the Spanish northern coast, Italy (except the south and Sicily), all of the Balkan peninsula down to Greece and Asia Minor and parts of Central and Eastern Europe up until about the 49th parallel in the eastern part of the range (Switzerland, Austria, South Moravia (
Podyjí/Thayatal in Austria) in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, south Poland (mainly
Bieszczady/
Bukovec Mountains in Slovakia), Romania, south-west Ukraine). Further isolated populations have been identified in western Germany (
Schlangenbad,
Odenwald, lower
Salzach, plus one - near
Passau - connected to the contiguous distribution area) and the northwest of the Czech Republic (near
Karlovy Vary, the northernmost known current natural presence of the species). The previously recognised subspecies
Zamenis longissimus romanus, found in southern Italy and Sicily, has been recently elevated to the status of a separate new species,
Zamenis lineatus (Italian Aesculapian snake). It is lighter in color, with a reddish-orange to glowing red iris. The populations previously classified as
Elaphe longissima living in south-east
Azerbaijan and northern Iranian
Hyrcanian forests were reclassified by Nilson and
Andrén in 1984 to
Elaphe persica, now
Zamenis persicus. According to fossil evidence, the species' area in the warmer
Atlantic period (around 8000–5000 years ago) of
Holocene reached as far north as Denmark. Three specimens were collected in Denmark between 1810 and 1863 on the southern part of
Zealand, presumably from a
relict and now extinct population. The current northwestern Czech population now is considered an autochthonous remnant of that maximum distribution based on the results of genetic analyses (it is closest genetically to the Carpathian populations). This likely applies also to the German populations. There are also fossils showing that they had UK residency during earlier interglacial periods but were driven south afterwards with subsequent
glacials; these repeated climate-caused contractions and extensions of range in Europe appear to have occurred multiple times over the
Pleistocene.
Escaped populations in Great Britain There are three populations of Aesculapian snake, descendants of escapees, in
Great Britain. The oldest recorded of these is on the grounds and in the vicinity of the
Welsh Mountain Zoo, near
Colwyn Bay, North
Wales. This population has survived and consistently reproduced since at least the early 1970s, and, in 2022, the population was estimated at 70 adults. A second, more recently established population was reported in 2010 along
Regent's Canal, near
London Zoo, likely living on rats and mice, and thought to number a few dozen. Growth of this population may be limited due to the urban setting and potential scarcity of appropriate nesting sites. It is thought this colony has been present for years, living unseen: it is not harmful or invasive and is predicted to die out. Sightings were still being reported in 2023, with the population estimated at around 40. In 2020, a third population was confirmed in Britain, this one in
Bridgend, Wales. This group has thrived for approximately 20 years. As of 2022, the Aesculapian snake is believed to be the only non-native species of snake in the United Kingdom to have established breeding populations. ==Habitat==