Nerodia species are widely spread throughout the southern and eastern half of the
United States, north into
Canada and south into
Mexico, as well as to the island of
Cuba. Many ranges overlap, and
intergrading of subspecies is not unknown, but is rare. Two species of
Nerodia are invasive in the southwest US. •
N. clarkii – around the
Gulf of Mexico (
Florida,
Louisiana,
Mississippi,
Texas) and
Cuba •
N. cyclopion – Texas, Louisiana,
Arkansas,
Missouri,
Illinois, Mississippi,
Alabama,
Georgia, Florida,
South Carolina,
Tennessee, and
Kentucky •
N. erythrogaster – Texas,
Oklahoma,
Kansas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina,
North Carolina, Illinois,
Indiana,
Ohio,
Michigan,
Iowa,
Delaware and into Mexico (
Durango,
Zacatecas,
Coahuila, and
Nuevo León) •
N. fasciata – Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Missouri, and Illinois •
N. harteri – west-central Texas •
N. paucimaculata – Central Texas •
N. rhombifer – Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama, as well as south into Mexico (Coahuila, Nuevo León,
Tamaulipas, and
Veracruz) •
N. sipedon –
Colorado,
Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas,
Minnesota,
Wisconsin, Illinois, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Kentucky,
West Virginia,
Virginia, Indiana, Ohio,
Pennsylvania,
New York,
Vermont,
New Hampshire,
Maine,
Massachusetts,
Rhode Island,
Connecticut,
New Jersey,
Delaware,
Maryland,
Michigan, and north into Canada •
N. taxispilota – Florida, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia ==In captivity==