How To Identify A Water Moccasin

How To Identify A Water Moccasin

As the weather warms up, snakes will emerge to take advantage of the warm weather and kick start their mating season. One of the snakes you’ll start to see this spring is the water moccasin. This venomous snake, also known as the cottonmouth, is a semi-aquatic snake found throughout the southeastern United States. The water moccasin is often mistaken for other snakes, so recognizing this snake in the wild is critical.

Water moccasins have large, triangular shaped heads with large jowls (due to their venom glands). Their eyes have a dark line through them and elliptical-shaped pupils. These snakes are large in size, ranging from 24″ to 48″. They have thick, heavy bodies when compared to their length. Their coloration can vary. These snakes can be completely brown or black (usually adults) or brown or yellow with dark crossbands. Adults tend to be darker while juveniles tend to be more brightly colored. They also have dark brown or yellow blotches on their bellies and black on the underside of their tails.

Water moccasins have facial pits they use to sense heat from predators and prey. They got their cottonmouth alias because the inside of their mouths are white in color. They will gape when they feel threatened, exposing this white color in an attempt to scare the threat away.

These snakes are found throughout the southeast, as far north as Virginia. They can be found in almost any freshwater habitat. They are active both during the day and at night, but will commonly hunt at night, especially during the hotter seasons of the year. They eat a variety of prey, including lizards, amphibians, other snakes, small turtles, birds, fish, mammals, and even baby alligators. They mate in the early summer.

Water moccasins are often mistaken for other nonvenomous water snakes. While the water moccasin has a thick body and short, thick tail, nonvenomous water snakes have more slender bodies and thinner tails. The shape of the head is also important. Water moccasins have large, blocky heads with pronounced necks that are much more narrow than the head. Water snakes, on the other hand, have more slender heads with necks that are more comparable in width to their heads.

While it can be tempting to run away or grab the closest thing you can to kill a snake when you come across it, the best practice is to leave it alone and slowly back away. In the case of a venomous snake, contact your local pest control company who can implement safe snake removal and relocation techniques.

Water Moccasin — How Dangerous Are They & What You Need to Know

Water Moccasin — How Dangerous Are They & What You Need to Know

If you’ve spotted a dark, thick-bodied snake near a pond, swamp, river, or even a backyard drainage ditch in Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, or South Carolina, you might be looking at a water moccasin (also called a cottonmouth). At Northwest, we get a sharp uptick in snake calls every spring and summer, and water moccasin sightings are the ones that generate the most concern. The honest reality: water moccasins are venomous and warrant respect, but they’re also widely misidentified, and most water snakes Southeast homeowners actually see are harmless nonvenomous species mistaken for cottonmouths.

Here’s what to know to identify a water moccasin correctly, understand the real (versus mythical) risk, stay safe around water in our region, and know what to do if you or a family member is ever bitten.

A water moccasin (cottonmouth snake) resting partially submerged at the edge of a Southeast pond, dark body visible against muddy bank.

Water moccasins are pit vipers native to the Southeast and are found near most permanent water bodies in Georgia and Alabama.

What Is a Water Moccasin?

Water moccasins (Agkistrodon piscivorus) are venomous pit vipers native to the Southeastern U.S. Their range covers most of Georgia and Alabama, extending from southeastern Virginia south to Florida and west to East Texas. They’re semi-aquatic, meaning they’re equally at home in water and on land, and they thrive in warm humid climates.

Two subspecies are present in our service area:

  • Northern cottonmouth (Agkistrodon piscivorus piscivorus): The dominant subspecies across Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and South Carolina. Darker coloring with less distinct banding as adults.
  • Florida cottonmouth (Agkistrodon conanti, recently elevated to its own species): Found in extreme south Georgia and Alabama. Often slightly larger with more distinct facial markings.

Typical habitats include swamps, rivers, lakes, ponds, marshes, drainage ditches, slow-moving creeks, and the overgrown edges of any persistent water body. They’re occasionally found in suburban yards near ponds, retention areas, or wet drainage features.

Water Moccasin Identification

Water moccasin vs nonvenomous water snake identification chart — head shape, pupil shape, body shape, and behavior compared side-by-side.

Four traits separate water moccasins from the nonvenomous water snakes they’re often confused with.

Physical Features

  • Body shape: Thick, muscular, often visibly heavier than nonvenomous water snakes. Adults typically 2 to 4 feet long, occasionally over 5 feet.
  • Color: Adults are usually dark olive, brown, or nearly black. Crossband markings are often faded or barely visible on older snakes. Juveniles are more distinctly banded with bright tail tips that fade with age.
  • Head shape: Broad, blocky, distinctly triangular when viewed from above. Much wider than the neck. This is the single most reliable visual identifier.
  • Mouth: Bright “cotton-white” mouth lining displayed when threatened (the source of the “cottonmouth” name).
  • Pupils: Vertical and cat-like (not round). All pit vipers in the U.S. share this trait.
  • Heat-sensing pits: Visible small pits between the eyes and nostrils on each side of the head.

Differences vs Nonvenomous Water Snakes

This is where misidentification causes the most unnecessary fear. Several harmless water snake species in the Southeast (especially the banded water snake, Nerodia fasciata, and the brown water snake, Nerodia taxispilota) are routinely killed because they’re mistaken for cottonmouths. The key differences:

  • Head shape: Nonvenomous water snakes have narrow, rounded heads not much wider than the neck. Cottonmouths have wide, blocky, triangular heads.
  • Pupils: Nonvenomous water snakes have round pupils. Cottonmouths have vertical slits.
  • Body shape: Nonvenomous water snakes are slimmer and more tapered. Cottonmouths are thick and muscular.
  • Behavior when threatened: Nonvenomous water snakes typically flee quickly underwater. Cottonmouths often stand their ground, coil defensively, vibrate the tail, and open the mouth to display the white lining.
  • Swimming style: Cottonmouths often swim with the head and most of the body visible above the water. Nonvenomous water snakes typically swim with only the head visible.

When in doubt, assume venomous and keep your distance. Identification at a distance is plenty.

Are Water Moccasins Aggressive?

This is one of the most exaggerated reputations in North American wildlife. Water moccasins are defensive, not predatory toward humans. They do not chase people. Studies tracking cottonmouth behavior consistently show they will hold ground when threatened, but they don’t pursue.

The defensive behavior that gets misinterpreted as aggression:

  • Standing ground: Unlike many snakes that immediately flee, cottonmouths often stay put when approached. This is conservation of energy, not aggression.
  • Open-mouth display: The cotton-white mouth opening is a warning (“I’m here, I’m venomous, back off”), not an attack signal.
  • Tail vibration: Rattled tail against leaves can sound similar to a rattlesnake. Same warning function.
  • Defensive striking: Will strike if cornered, stepped on, or directly handled. Bites occur almost exclusively in these scenarios.

Give a cottonmouth 6+ feet of distance and step around it, not toward it, and you almost certainly won’t be bitten.

How Dangerous Is a Water Moccasin Bite?

Venom and Medical Risk

Water moccasin venom is hemotoxic, meaning it affects tissue and blood circulation rather than the nervous system. Effects of a bite include:

  • Immediate intense pain at the bite site
  • Rapid swelling and bruising
  • Tissue damage that can progress for hours or days without treatment
  • In severe cases: blood-clotting issues, blistering, and tissue necrosis
  • Systemic symptoms (nausea, weakness, low blood pressure) in moderate to severe envenomation

Death from a cottonmouth bite is rare in the modern era thanks to antivenom availability, but bites are medical emergencies that require immediate hospital treatment. Tissue damage from untreated bites can be permanent. Approximately 25% of cottonmouth bites are “dry bites” with no venom injected, but you cannot reliably tell at the time of the bite, so always seek emergency care.

First Aid for a Snake Bite

Current medical guidance (per CDC and major emergency medicine organizations) for any suspected venomous snake bite:

  1. Call 911 immediately. Don’t drive yourself. Don’t wait to see if symptoms develop.
  2. Keep the affected limb still and below heart level. Movement spreads venom faster through the lymphatic system.
  3. Remove rings, watches, and tight clothing from the affected limb before swelling sets in.
  4. Take a photo of the snake if you can do so safely from a distance. Helps medical providers confirm species. Do NOT try to capture or kill the snake.
  5. Stay calm and minimize movement until help arrives.

What NOT to do (these were old advice and are now known to make outcomes worse):

  • Do not cut the bite or try to suck out venom.
  • Do not apply a tourniquet.
  • Do not apply ice or cold packs.
  • Do not give the bite victim alcohol or caffeine.
  • Do not try to capture the snake.

For authoritative reference on snake bite first aid, see the CDC’s venomous snake safety guidance.

Where You’re Most Likely to Encounter a Water Moccasin in the Southeast

  • Swamp and marsh edges
  • Slow-moving creeks and rivers, especially the muddy banks
  • Pond and lake shorelines, particularly with overhanging vegetation
  • Drainage ditches in rural and suburban areas
  • Around boat ramps, docks, fishing piers, and fish-cleaning stations
  • Yards with persistent standing water, water features, or proximity to wetlands
  • Under or near woodpiles, debris piles, and dense ground cover near water

Water Moccasin Safety Tips for Southeast Homeowners

A Southeast homeowner wearing tall protective boots while walking through tall grass near a residential pond.

Tall boots, long pants, and visual awareness are the simplest snake-safety baseline for Southeast yards near water.

Avoiding Encounters

  • Stay on cleared paths near water rather than walking through tall grass or dense underbrush.
  • Avoid wading in murky water where you can’t see the bottom.
  • Don’t reach under logs, rocks, or debris near water without looking first.
  • Make noise as you walk near water (snakes feel ground vibrations and typically move away).
  • Be especially cautious from late spring through early fall when snakes are most active.
  • Check before stepping over logs or large rocks near water.

What to Wear Outdoors Near Water

  • Tall waterproof boots (knee-high) when working in or near wetlands.
  • Long pants tucked into boots.
  • Avoid sandals or open-toe shoes near any water body.
  • Carry a flashlight after dark and look before each step.

Yard Safety

  • Remove brush piles, woodpiles, and debris that provide snake shelter.
  • Keep grass trimmed short, especially around any water features.
  • Clear vegetation around pond edges and drainage features.
  • Eliminate rodent populations that attract snakes as a food source.
  • Seal gaps in foundations, sheds, and outbuildings that snakes might enter.

Teaching Kids About Snake Safety

  • Teach the rule: “If you see a snake, stop, back up slowly, and tell an adult.”
  • Never try to pick up, touch, or kill a snake.
  • Identify safe and unsafe play areas (no playing barefoot near ponds, creeks, or tall grass).
  • For more general snake prevention strategies, see our home remedies to keep snakes away guide.

Water Moccasin Myths vs Facts

  • Myth: Water moccasins chase humans. Fact: They don’t. They stand their ground, but they don’t pursue. Documented research shows zero cases of intentional cottonmouth pursuit of humans.
  • Myth: All cottonmouth bites are fatal. Fact: With modern antivenom and prompt medical treatment, fatalities are extremely rare. Tissue damage is the more common serious outcome.
  • Myth: You can identify them by color alone. Fact: Adult cottonmouths are often nearly solid dark color, easily confused with several harmless water snakes. Head shape, pupil shape, and behavior are more reliable identifiers.
  • Myth: Cottonmouths can bite underwater. Fact: They can, technically, but bites in water are extremely rare. Most defensive behavior happens on land or while basking partially out of water.
  • Myth: Killing a snake on your property prevents future encounters. Fact: Other snakes typically move into vacated territory. Habitat modification is far more effective than removal.

When to Call Professional Help

Professional wildlife or snake control is worth calling Northwest about if:

  • You’ve confirmed a water moccasin on your property (especially repeat sightings).
  • Snake sightings are happening near play areas, patios, pool decks, or other high-traffic zones.
  • You need inspection and habitat modification to prevent repeated encounters.
  • You’re managing a property with significant water features (ponds, retention areas, drainage ditches).
  • Snake activity is accompanied by visible rodent activity (the food source that’s attracting them).

Professional snake services typically include identification, safe removal when needed, habitat modification (removing harborage, addressing rodent populations), and ongoing prevention recommendations. For broader snake prevention strategies, see our snake repellent guide.

(Spotted a water moccasin or seeing recurring snake activity? Schedule a free Northwest inspection and we’ll identify what’s around, address the conditions attracting them, and lay out a prevention plan.)

Frequently Asked Questions About Water Moccasins

Can water moccasins climb trees?

Yes, but rarely. Cottonmouths can climb low branches, especially overhanging water. They’re not arboreal hunters like rat snakes. Most encounters happen at ground level or in water. Snake sightings high in trees are far more likely to be rat snakes or other nonvenomous climbers.

Do water moccasins chase people?

No. This is one of the most persistent and inaccurate myths in Southeastern wildlife folklore. Cottonmouths are defensive, not predatory toward humans. They will hold their ground when threatened, but they don’t pursue. Most perceived “chasing” is actually the snake moving toward water (its escape route), which happens to be in the same direction as the person.

Are all cottonmouths dangerous?

All cottonmouths are venomous and warrant respect. About 25% of defensive bites are “dry bites” with no venom injected, but you can’t reliably tell at the time of a bite. Always treat any suspected cottonmouth bite as a medical emergency and seek immediate hospital care.

How common are water moccasin bites?

Bites are uncommon relative to encounter rates. Most cottonmouth sightings result in zero contact between snake and human. Bites occur almost exclusively in cases where the snake is stepped on, handled, or cornered. In Georgia and Alabama combined, fewer than 100 documented cottonmouth bites occur in a typical year, the vast majority non-fatal with proper medical care.

How do I tell a water moccasin from a harmless water snake?

Four traits: (1) head shape (cottonmouth = wide, blocky, triangular; nonvenomous = narrow, rounded), (2) pupils (cottonmouth = vertical slits; nonvenomous = round), (3) body shape (cottonmouth = thick and muscular; nonvenomous = slimmer), and (4) behavior (cottonmouth = stands ground, opens mouth, vibrates tail; nonvenomous = flees quickly underwater). When in doubt, keep your distance regardless.

A pest control technician performing a yard inspection near a residential pond, looking for snake harborage and rodent activity.

Snake prevention is mostly about removing the conditions that bring them in: harborage, rodent food sources, and overgrown ground cover.

Schedule a Snake & Wildlife Inspection

If you’ve confirmed water moccasin activity, you’re seeing recurring snake sightings, or you have property features (ponds, drainage, dense brush) that attract snakes, Northwest’s team handles identification, habitat modification, and ongoing prevention. Most snake problems are really habitat problems, and habitat changes hold longer than removal alone.

About the Author

Anna V., Editorial Lead — Pest Education leads pest education content for Northwest Exterminating, working with senior technicians and service center managers across our Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and South Carolina service areas to translate field expertise into homeowner-friendly guides. The focus: accurate, regionally-specific answers to the pest questions Southeast homeowners are actually searching for.


Why Snake Control Is Important In The Fall

Why Snake Control Is Important In The Fall

As the season shifts from summer to early fall, cooler weather is around the corner. Many pests begin the hustle and bustle of preparing for winter – scavenging and storing food, finding a place to hibernate, or making their way into your home to overwinter. This time of year sees an increase in one pest in particular – snakes! Fall is a time for high snake activity and encounters with humans become more common.

There are many reasons snake control is important in the fall. As the leaves begin to change colors to red, orange, and brown and fall to the ground, they provide the ideal camouflage for snakes. Fall is also the time snakes begin to prepare for brumation and/or hibernation. Most snake species breed in the spring and eggs are hatched by the time autumn rolls around. These juvenile snakes are curious and more likely to be seen by humans. There are 6 venomous snake species in the southeastern United States and each of them actually breed in the fall. This means this time of year males will be actively seeking females to breed with, increasing your chance of an encounter with them. Overdevelopment in many areas has also depleted the natural habitats of many snakes, also increasing their chances of encounters with humans.

Because we see such an increase in snake activity during the fall, snake control becomes much more important. Here are some of our favorite snake prevention tips you can utilize this snake season.

  1. Familiarize Yourself. Identifying snakes is critical to avoiding and preventing them. Do some research and find out which snakes are common in your area, what they look like, and where to find them. Identify any areas you spend time in outdoors that could potentially house snakes and try to avoid them.
  2. Be Aware. Be aware of your surrounding when spending time outdoors. Look down when walking and check overhead when in wooded areas. Try to spot snakes before you walk right up on them.
  3. Avoid Habitats. Snakes like to hide in areas that provide them protection and coverage from predators. They can often be found in tall grass, overgrowth, on or under large rocks, rock piles, and wood piles. If you have to walk through these areas, keep your feet and legs protected, keep your eyes open
  4. Walk With Confidence. Snakes don’t have ears so they can’t actually hear you coming but they do respond to vibrations in the ground and can feel you coming before they actually see you. When walking outdoors walk with strong, confident steps and make your presence known.
  5. Cover Up. If you choose to spend time outdoors, make sure to wear closed-toe shoes and long pants if possible. Try to avoid sandals and flip flops as they leave your feet and toes exposed to potential snakebites.
  6. Look Up. Some types of snakes can actually climb trees and will even use overlapping branches to move from tree to tree without ever touching the ground. When walking or boating through wooded areas make sure to look up and keep an eye out for overhead snakes.
  7. Clean Up. Making your home and yard less inviting to snakes will help keep them from coming in. Seal any cracks and crevices on the outside of your home to keep snakes out in search of warmth and food. Remove any debris and clutter from your yard and garage. Keep woodpiles elevated and stored away from your home. Clear any overgrowth from your yard.
  8. Use snake repellent. There are many commercial snake repellent products on the market today. If you prefer a more green snake control option, there are also natural snake repellents you can make at home. Choose whichever option works best for you.
  9. Call the Pros. Snake control can be a daunting task. If you have a problem with snakes around your home, contact your local pest control company who can help identify what type of snake you are dealing with and help safely and humanely get them away from your property.

 

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When Does Snake Season End?

When Does Snake Season End?

As the weather cools off and fall peeks around the corner, many people are taking advantage of the milder weather and spending more time outside. Unfortunately, many pests and wildlife, including snakes, are also enjoying the milder weather, preparing for the impending winter. Although most snakes encountered in Georgia are nonvenomous, there are a few species of venomous snakes to keep an eye out for. These include the copperhead, the timber rattlesnake, the cottonmouth, the eastern diamondback rattlesnake, the eastern coral snake, and the pigmy rattlesnake.

When spending time outdoors, keep an eye out for snakes in backyards, parks, and areas near the woods. They also like to frequent areas that border streams, lakes, swamps, and ponds. Snake season begins in the spring, usually March to April. Snake season doesn’t end until late fall or even winter, depending on weather patterns and where you’re located. Snakes in the southern states will stay active much longer than up north where the cold sets in sooner.

If you run into a snake, keep these tips in mind:

  1. Familiarize yourself with the venomous snake species common in your area and how to recognize them.
  2. Try to identify the snake without getting too close to it.
  3. Give the snake space.
  4. If spending time outdoors, wear closed-toed shoes and long pants.
  5. Remove any brush, log piles and other attractants for rodents from around your home.
  6. Seal up any cracks, gaps, and holes that snakes can use to get into.
  7. Remember that non-venomous snakes are protected by law in Georgia.

Because snake season hasn’t quite ended yet, it’s still important to take precautions when spending time outdoors. It’s best to leave snake removal to the professionals, especially if you aren’t sure what type of snake you’re dealing with. If you have a problem with snakes or any other pests, contact your local pest control company for proper identification and safe elimination of the offending creature.

 

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How to Easily Deter Snakes Away from Your Property

How to Easily Deter Snakes Away from Your Property

As the weather continues to warm up, snakes start to become more active and on the move in search of food. Most homeowners can agree that they fear finding snakes in the yard. But while most of us don’t want snakes hanging out on our property, it’s important to note that these wildlife creatures are beneficial to have around as they can get rid of other pests infesting your property. Instead of eliminating these creatures, every homeowner can take simple preventative measures to encourage them to find a different location to habitat.

Clean the Yard!

Ensuring that your yard is well-kept up is one of the easiest and simple ways to deter snakes from your property. Debris and leaf piles are a huge attractant to rodents which will then attract snakes. The leaf piles are additionally a great place for snakes to hide out in. Make sure you are cleaning up any debris piles, including sticks, brush, and tree limbs from your yard.

Overgrown trees and shrubs provide cover and shelter for snakes. Make sure that you are trimming your overgrown trees and shrubs, so they are not touching the house or garage. Don’t forget to trim the branches off the ground so there is at least 24” to 36” space underneath. This helps eliminate a place for snakes to take cover, but also makes them easier to spot.

Remove Attractant Items!

You might not be aware, but certain items are placed in your yard that could be attracting snakes. While many love to have decorative birdhouses and bird feeders in the yard, they can attract snakes. Some snakes are great climbers and will climb up to feast on the birds feeding on the feeders or living in the birdhouse. Consider placing the birdhouse or feeder on a metal pole or wood post, with the post wrapped in metal sheeting.

Install Backup!

A perch pole is a great alternative to help keep snakes away from the property. Owls or hawks are natural predators to snakes and will use the installed perch pole. Make sure that the pole is in an open area in your yard, so the birds can have a good view of the entire area.

Though, sometimes it’s just best to install fencing to help keep snakes out. If you decide to install fencing, make sure that it’s buried a few inches into the ground and should be made up of ¼” or smaller rigid mesh. At the top of the fence, make sure that it bends to keep snakes from climbing over it.

If you’ve tried all the prevention tips you can to deter snakes away from your yard but it’s not working, it might be time to call your local wildlife control company. These professionals can help establish a regularly scheduled service and treatment plan to help with your snake problem.

 

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