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Western Hognose Snake (Toffee / Evans Hypo)
Heterodon nasicus "Toffee / Evans Hypo"
Morph Toffee / Evans Hypo. The dramatic 'cobra' of the prairies. Famous for its shovel-shaped snout ('pig nose') used for digging, it is a diurnal terrestrial colubrid that feigns theatrical cobra-like attacks or spectacular false deaths (thanatosis) if frightened. It requires peculiar husbandry due to its mild venom (rear-fanged) and specialized diet (in the wild, it almost exclusively eats toads).
- Family
- Colubridae
- Origin
- Nord America
- Origin
- Extra-Amazon South AmericaCentral America and CaribbeanNorth America
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
Share
22 °C - 32 °C
n/a
Terrestrial
32 °C
Low
Description
Geographical Origin and Habitat: Widespread in the sandy prairies, semi-arid deserts, and dry plains of the United States and northern Mexico. Being expert fossorial (burrowing) snakes, they spend most of their time underground, plowing through sand and loose soil in search of toad nests, salamanders, and small rodents.
Taxonomy and Genetics: Colubridae family (often reclassified to Dipsadidae). One of the most captive-bred snakes in the world thanks to its comical face and formidable genetic morphs (Anaconda, Conda, Albino, Toxic, Snow). It is a **Rear-fanged Venomous** snake (Opisthoglyphous): it possesses venom fangs, but not frontally like vipers. The fangs are located at the back of the upper jaw, and the venom is mild, specifically evolved to paralyze amphibian toads, and generally harmless to healthy humans.
Behavior and Habits: Diurnal and outrageously theatrical. If threatened, it adopts two legendary tactics: 1) The Cobra Bluff: it flattens its neck (simulating a hood), hisses furiously, and pretends to strike by head-butting (it rarely bites for defense, delivering closed-mouth 'boops'). 2) Thanatosis: if the predator persists, it flips onto its back, opens its mouth, lets its tongue loll out into the mud, and defecates, pretending to be a rotting corpse. If the owner flips it back upright, it will immediately flip onto its back again to prove it is 'really dead'.
Morphology and Sexual Dimorphism: A very stout, short snake ('sausage-like'). Males remain lilliputian (15-20 inches / 40-50 cm, 80 grams), while females are massive and can reach 3 feet (80-90 cm) exceeding 300 grams in weight. The unmistakable feature is the upturned rostral scale ('pig nose'), evolved as a perfect biological shovel to rapidly dig through sandy and gravelly soils without injuring the snout.
Nota sul Morph (Toffee / Evans Hypo): Una variante cromatica o fenotipo specifico estremamente ricercato dagli appassionati per i suoi colori particolari.
Care and observations
Terrarium Setup: Fossorial terrestrial hunters. They require horizontal terrariums (e.g., 36x18 inches for an adult female). Height is irrelevant as they almost never climb. THE SUBSTRATE IS CRITICAL: they need at least 4-6 inches (10-15 cm) of a diggable layer (dust-free Aspen wood shavings, or a mix of dry sand and topsoil). The snake will spend its days 'swimming' through the bedding, creating complex tunnel systems. Strictly avoid wet coco coir, which will lead to immediate respiratory infections.
Lighting and Heating: Lovers of dry, bright sun. Strict thermal gradients: Cool side at 72-77°F (22-25°C) and a Hot Basking spot (under a halogen heat lamp) touching 90-93°F (32-34°C). They often partially emerge from the sand (leaving only their head and neck out) under the hot spotlight to thermoregulate. A 5% UVB lamp is highly recommended to stimulate diurnal activity and natural behaviors.
Humidity and Hydration: DRY environments. Humidity should sit between 30% and 50%, normal central-heated house values. NEVER mist the terrarium. Provide a small water bowl in the cool corner, narrow enough to prevent the snake from getting in to soak, otherwise evaporation will dangerously raise humidity causing severe dermatitis (Scale Rot).
Feeding and Supplementation: THE REAL CHALLENGE. In the wild, they are specialized Toad eaters (their rear fangs are specifically adapted to 'pop' and deflate toads that puff up with air for defense). In captivity, they must be converted to thawed mice. Babies are infamous for dramatic 'hunger strikes' if they don't smell amphibians (Scenting): breeders often have to rub the thawed pinky mouse on dead frogs, or canned tuna/hard-boiled eggs, to trick them into accepting it. Adults eat mice every 7-10 days.
Compatibility and Cohabitation: Solitary and cannibalistic at a young age. Keep strictly separated. During mating, the massive female might occasionally try to swallow the microscopic male if not abundantly fed beforehand.
Health and Common Diseases: VENOM WARNING: Although not lethal, a prolonged, 'chewing' feeding bite where the rear-fangs successfully inoculate the saliva/venom will cause the keeper's hand to suffer severe swelling, throbbing itching, joint pain, and blistering erythema lasting for days (though true anaphylaxis is rare). Scale Rot: a ventral bacterial infection manifesting as bloody brown scabs if the substrate under the water bowl is left constantly wet and soiled.
Reptile profile
- Diet
- Carnivoro
- Humidity
- 30 % - 50 %
- Ambient temperature
- 25 °C
- Basking spot
- 32 °C
- UVB
- Low
- Adult size
- 90 cm
- Minimum enclosure
- 100 L
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.

