yeah your probably right, im gonna make it a goal to find a copperhead in the pines, or at least try, im gonna ask this guy if he has a pic, and if he does than ill start to consider what he said, i guess i should look near rivers and creek because copperheads like to live near water right?
Several months (or a year-or-more ?)ago when I brought up this topic of "why no copperheads in the NJPBs?" there seemed to be no satisfactory answer. I mentioned that I'd never seen one when I was herping actively in the PBs in the 50s and 60s and just assumed they weren't s'posed t'be there. Later, when I spent time in the south east and living in east Texas, I marveled at the copperheads that were plentiful in the sandy oak-pine-palmetto (very NJPB-like) from southern VA, thru the Carolinas and GA, northern FL, and across the Gulf states to Texas. But then, of course , I failed (being the lumper that I am) to recognize that it is the SOUTHERN copperhead that abounds down in Dixie - NOT the northern copperhead!
Let's remember, the NORTHER copperhead has a wide range in the north-east, and none of that range includes any biomes even remotely similar to the NJPBs. "O.K.!" I hear you cry; "...so since we have pine snakes, king snakes, corn snakes, scarlet snakes, canebrake-oid rattlers, and a plethora of other plant and animal species typical of the southeast coastal plain, then WHY NO SOUTHERN COPPERHEADS?" Well... I don't know, but I'd have to ask, in the same vein, why no Eastern diamondbacks, water mocassins, 4-lined rat snakes, yellow-bellied watersnakes, pigmy rattlers, and many other south-eastern coastal plain herps that are found in supposedly PB-like environs further south?
Probably because 'tho we see the SE coastal plain sandy pine/oak forests as essentially identical to the PBs we know and love in NJ, those "absent-but-oughtta-be-there" species just see it differently... and remember; it's their biological needs/attitudes that counts, not ours!
Is it just the winter temperatures? Mocassins live (or lived) as far north as southern Illinois where winters can be at least as severe as those in the maritime climate of southern NJ; a couple of spp. of Tantilla occur as far north as southern IN and north central MO - again with winters often more testing of hardiness than those of the NJPBs.
I'm offering no specific answers here, just some food-for-thought to mull over when we think we are asking an obviously simple question.
And ( as I step up on the soap box...) the longer we ignore the clear and present evidence of progressive climatic change associated with global warming, and fail to address (and re-dress) the manners in which our specie's activities are contributing to effecting that change, the question "why are there no copperheads in the pine barrens of New Jersey" will pale in significance in comparison with the results of ignoring even more obvious questions about what we have done and are doing to our home planet.
Have a nice week.
Best'y'all,
Dave