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1 Allen, E. R. 1937. Florida snake venom experiments. Proceedings of the Florida Academy of Sciences 2:70–76.
2 Allen, E. R. 1940. Poisonous snakes of Florida. Florida Game and Fish 1(10):6–9.
3 Allen, E. R., and M. P. Merryday. 1940. A snake in the hand—is worth two in the grass for medical research, and the job of capturing and keeping them sheds interesting sidelights on their habits and peculiarities. Natural History 46:234–239.
4 Allen, E. R., and D. Swindell. 1948. Cottonmouth moccasin of Florida. Herpetologica 4(Supplement 1):1–15.
5 Allen, E. R. 1949. Don't fear snakes—respect them! Outdoor Life 103(4):32–33, 70–72.
6 Allen, E. R., and W. T. Neill. 1950. The cottonmouth moccasin. Florida Wildlife 4(3):8–9, 16.
7 Allen, E. R. 1951. Here's how to get along with reptiles. Florida Wildlife 4(9):6–8, 20–22.
8 Allen, E. R. 1953. Here's how to get along with reptiles. Florida Wildlife 7(5):11, 37, 40.
9 Allen, R. 1961. How to hunt the eastern diamondback rattlesnake. Publication of Ross Allen's Reptile Institute, Silver Springs, Florida, USA. 20pp.
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12 Allen, P. E. 1971. Night of the cottonmouth. Outdoor Life 148(1):58–61, 122–125.
13 Allen, H. 1977. Snakebite: some dos, don'ts and maybes. Florida Sportsman 8(3):56–58, 61–63.
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17 Anonymous. 1855. Scenes & adventures in the Florida war. By an officer of the U.S. Army. Spirit of the Times 25(October 6):398.
18 Anonymous. 1930. A Florida news item. Bulletin of the Antivenin Institute of America 3(4):113, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
19 Anonymous. 1974. "Snaky season" returns. Florida Department of Natural Resources, Florida Conservation News 9(10):6.
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21 Anonymous. 1988. Serpents move in next door. Reprinted in League of Florida Herpetological Societies Newsletter (December):?
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27 Barbour, T. 1944. Camping in Florida. The Atlantic 173(5):86–90.
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30 Bartlett, D. 2002. Notes from the field. The rains came: Payne's Prairie is a study in the extremes of nature. Reptiles Magazine 10(5):22–27.
31 Bartram, W. 1791. Travels through North & South Carolina, Georgia, East & West Florida, the Cherokee country, the extensive territories of the Muscogulges, or Creek Confederacy, and the country of the Chactaws; containing, an account of the soil and natural productions of those regions, together with observations on the manners of the Indians. James & Johnson, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. 522pp. Bartram, W. 1947. The travels of William Bartram [edited by Mark van Doren]. Dover, New York, New York, USA. 414pp.
32 Bennetts, R. E., M. W. Collopy, and S. R. Beissinger. 1988. Nesting ecology of snail kites in Water Conservation Area 3A. Department of Wildlife and Range Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit Technical Report No. 31. 174pp.
33 Bernardino, F. S. 1990. Seasonal activity and road mortality of the snakes of the Pa-hay-okee wetlands of Everglades National Park. M.S. Thesis, Florida International University, Miami, Florida, USA. 36pp.
34 Bernardino, F. S., Jr., and G. H. Dalrymple. 1992. Seasonal activity and road mortality of the snakes of the Pa-hay-okee wetlands of Everglades National Park, USA. Biological Conservation 62:71–75.
35 Blair, W. F. 1935. An ecological investigation of the marsh rabbit of the region of Gainesville, Florida. M.S. Thesis, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 67pp.
36 Blair, W. F. 1936. The Florida marsh rabbit. Journal of Mammalogy 17:197–207.
37 Blaney, R. M. 1971. An annotated checklist and biogeographic analysis of the insular herpetofauna of the Apalachicola Region, Florida. Herpetologica 27:406–430.
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39 Blatchley, W. S. 1932. In days agone: notes on the fauna and flora of subtropical Florida in the days when most of its area was a primeval wilderness. Nature Publishing Company, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. 338pp.
40 Boundy, J. 1994. County records for Florida amphibians and reptiles. Herpetological Review 25:78–79.
41 Boundy, J. 1995. Maximum lengths of North American snakes. Bulletin of the Chicago Herpetological Society 30(6):109–122.
42 Brinton, D. G. 1869. A guide-book of Florida and the South, for tourists, invalids and emigrants, with a map of the St. John River. George MacLean, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. 136pp.
43 Brown, A. H. 1948. Haunting heart of the Everglades. National Geographic Magazine 93:145–173.
44 Brues, C. T. 1942. Occurrence of Porocephalus crotali humboldt in Florida. Ohio Journal of Science 42:112.
45 Bulske, M. E. 1957. Florida isn't heaven! Vantage Press, New York, New York, USA. 121pp.
46 Burbridge, B. 1921. Bear hunting in Florida. Field and Stream 25:969–972.
47 Butler, J. 1993. The fate of Hatchling Number 116. Florida Department of Environmental Protection, Office of Resource Management, Resource Management Notes 5(4):5.
48 Butler, J. 1993. The fate of Hatchling Number 116. Tortoise Burrow, Bulletin of The Gopher Tortoise Council 13(2):6.
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50 Butler, J. A., and S. Sowell. 1996. Survivorship and predation of hatchling and yearling gopher tortoises, Gopherus polyphemus. Journal of Herpetology 30:455–458.
51 Byrd, E. E., M. V. Parker, and R. J. Reiber. 1940. A new genus and two new species of digenetic trematodes, with a discussion on the systematics of these and certain related forms. Journal of Parasitology 26:111–122.
52 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1936. The Gulf island cottonmouths. Proceedings of the Florida Academy of Sciences 1:86–90.
53 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1940. A contribution to the herpetology of Florida. University of Florida Publications, Biological Sciences 3:1–118.
54 Carr, A. F., Jr., and M. H. Carr. 1942. Notes on the courtship of the cottonmouth moccasin. Proceedings of the New England Zoological Club 20:1–6.
55 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1963. The reptiles. Time, New York, New York, USA. 193pp.
56 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1964. Ulendo: travels of a naturalist in and out of Africa. Alfred A. Knopf, New York, New York, USA. 303pp.
57 Carr, A. 1994. The Gulf-island cottonmouths. Pages 225–229 in M. H. Carr, editor. A naturalist in Florida: a celebration of Eden. Yale University Press, New Haven and London, Connecticut, USA.
58 Carter, W. H. 1980. Creatures and chronicles from Cross Creek. Atlantic, Tabor City, North Carolina, USA. 296pp.
59 Carter, W. H. 1985. Return to Cross Creek. Atlantic, Tabor City, North Carolina, USA. 296pp.
60 Carter, W. H. 1989. This happened to me: snake's alive. Outdoor Life 183(4):112.
61 Cave, H. B. 1937. Frogs don't bite, but—. Outdoor Life 80(2):43, 57.
62 Cook, D. G. 1982. Cottonmouth activity patterns in northwest Florida. Page 63 (abstract) in Proceedings of the 25th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles and the 30th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, 1–6 August 1982, North Carolina State Museum of Natural History, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
63 Cook, D. G. 1983. Activity patterns of the cottonmouth water moccasin, Agkistrodon piscivorus Lacepede, on a northwest Florida headwater stream. M.S. Thesis, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 88pp.
64 Cory, C. B. 1895. Remarks on some of the Floridian snakes. Pages 124–131 in Hunting and fishing in Florida. The Barta Press, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
65 Curtis, N. 1952. Tate called it hell. Outdoor Life 109(6):52–59.
66 Dalrymple, B. W. 1985. Close encounters of the fanged kind. Field & Stream 90(1):88, 146, 148.
67 Dickinson, J. C. 1946. An ecological reconnaissance of the biota of a series of roadside ponds and ditches in northern Florida. M.S. Thesis, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 47pp.
68 Dimock, A. W., and J. A. Dimock. 1908. Florida enchantments. The Outing, New York, New York, USA. 318pp.
69 Dimock, A. W. 1908. The passing of the Florida alligator. Harper's Monthly Magazine 116:669–676.
70 Dimock, A. W. 1926. Florida enchantments. Revised edition. Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York, New York, USA. 338pp.
71 Dodd, C. K., Jr. 1998. Desmognathus auriculatus at Devil's Millhopper State Geological Site, Alachua County, Florida. Florida Scientist 61:38–45.
72 Dodge, C. R. 1898. Subtropical Florida. Cosmopolitan Magazine 15:345–362.
73 Douglas, B. T. 1943. Frog legs with trimmings. Field & Stream 47(11):30, 59–60.
74 East, B. 1975. Warning: death might not rattle. Outdoor Life 156(5):76–78, 84, 88.
75 Ellis, L. 1984. Cottonmouth research. Florida Wildlife 38(1):28–30.
76 Ernst, C. H. 1992. Venomous reptiles of North America. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C., USA. 248pp.
77 Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration for the State of Florida. 1984. The WPA guide to Florida: the Federal Writers' Project guide to 1930s Florida [with a new introduction by J. I. McCollum]. Pantheon Books, New York, New York, USA. 600pp.
78 Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission. n.d. Snakes can kill. Tallahassee, Florida, USA. 6pp.
79 Forbush, T. B., compiler. 1868. Florida: the advantages and inducements which it offers to immigrants. Second edition. New England Emigrant Aid Company, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 20pp.
80 Ford, I. B. 1905. On the Homosassa: fishing experiences of a northerner on river and Gulf in Florida. Field and Stream 9:345–349.
81 Foster, M. L., and S. R. Humphrey. 1992. Effectiveness of wildlife crossings in reducing animal/auto collisions on Interstate 75, Big Cypress Swamp, Florida. Prepared for Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission. Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 124pp.
82 Franz, R., J. Bauer, and T. Morris. 1994. Review of biologically significant caves and their faunas in Florida and south Georgia. Brimleyana 20:1–109.
83 Frederick, P. C., and M. W. Collopy. 1988. Reproductive ecology of wading birds in relation to water conditions in the Florida Everglades. Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit Technical Report No. 30, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 259pp.
84 Frederick, P. C., and M. W. Collopy. 1989. The role of predation in determining reproductive success of colonially nesting wading birds in the Florida Everglades. Condor 91:860–867.
85 Gloyd, H. K. 1969. Two additional subspecies of North American crotalid snakes, genus Agkistrodon. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 82:219–232.
86 Gloyd, H. K., and R. Conant. 1990. Snakes of the Agkistrodon complex: a monographic review. Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, St. Louis, Missouri, USA. 614pp.
87 Goin, C. J. 1943. The lower vertebrate fauna of the water hyacinth community in northern Florida. Proceedings of the Florida Academy of Sciences 6:143–154.
88 Gore, R. 1976. Twilight hope for Big Cypress. National Geographic Magazine 150:251–273.
89 Gregware, B., and C. Gregware. 1997. Guide to the Lake Okeechobee area. Pineapple Press, Inc., Sarasota, Florida, USA. 212pp.
90 Grimes, S. A. 1945. Birds of Duval County. Florida Naturalist 16:29–36.
91 Grossman, M. L. 1964. Rebirth in the South. Sports Illustrated 20(13):43–44, 46.
92 Grow, G. 1997. Florida parks: a guide to camping and nature. Sixth edition. Longleaf, Tallahassee, Florida, USA. 288pp.
93 Haliburton, J. H. 1935. Live snakes from the Everglades. Outdoor Life 76(5):36–37, 66–67.
94 Hallock, C., compiler. 1876. Camp life in Florida: a handbook for sportsmen and settlers. Forest and Stream, New York, New York, USA. 348pp.
95 Hamilton, W. R. 1987. A visit to Death Lake, Florida (1888). Pages 109–111 in F. Oppel and T. Meisel, editors. Tales of Old Florida. Castle, Secaucus, New Jersey, USA.
96 Hayes, A. A. 2000. A little piece of string. Herp Herald, Newsletter of the Gainesville Herpetological Society 17(1):5–6, 12.
97 Heinrich, G., and K. R. Studenroth, Jr. 1996. Agkistrodon piscivorus conanti (Florida cottonmouth). Diet. Herpetological Review 27:22.
98 Heinz, G. H., H. F. Percival, and M. L. Jennings. 1991. Contaminants in American alligator eggs from Lake Apopka, Lake Griffin, and Lake Okeechobee, Florida. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 16:277–285.
99 Helm, T. W., III. 1952. Four deadly fangs. Field & Stream 57(1):56–57, 104–108.
100 Helm, T. 1965. A world of snakes. Dodd, Mead & Company, New York, New York, USA. 178pp.
101 Holman, J. A. 1981. A review of North American Pleistocene snakes. Publications of the Museum Michigan State University, Paleontological Series 1:261–306.
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105 Hughes, W. 1969. Danger afield. Florida Wildlife 23(5):18–19.
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110 Jensen, A. S. 1981. Poisonous snakes of Florida. Florida Cooperative Extension Service Forest Resources and Conservation Fact Sheet No. 9, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 3pp.
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115 Klinkenberg, J. 1980. Bullfrogs in the bag. Florida Wildlife 34(1):2–4.
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187 Watt, C. J., Jr., and J. F. Gennaro, Jr. 1965. Pit viper bites in south Georgia and north Florida. Transactions of the Southern Surgical Association 77:378–386.
188 Watt, C. H., Jr. 1978. Poisonous snakebite treatment in the United States. Journal of the American Medical Association 240:654–656.
189 Weinstein, S. A., C. F. DeWitt, and L. A. Smith. 1992. Variability of venom-neutralizing properties of serum from snakes of the colubrid genus Lampropeltis. Journal of Herpetology 26:452–461.
190 Wharton, C. H. 1958. The ecology of the cottonmouth, Agkistrodon piscivorus piscivorus Lacepede, of Sea Horse Key, Florida. Dissertation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 225pp.
191 Wharton, C. H. 1960. Birth and behavior of a brood of cottonmouths, Agkistrodon piscivorus piscivorus with notes on tail-luring. Herpetologica 16:125–129.
192 Wharton, C. H. 1966. Reproduction and growth in the cottonmouths, Agkistrodon piscivorus piscivorus Lacepede, of Cedar Keys, Florida. Copeia 1966:149–161.
193 Wharton, C. H. 1969. The cottonmouth moccasin on Sea Horse Key, Florida. Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences 14:227–272.
194 Will, L. E. 1964. Lawrence Will's cracker history of Okeechobee: "custard apple, moonvine, catfish and moonshine." Great Outdoors, St. Petersburg, Florida, USA. 308pp.
195 Willard, G. P. 1908. A Florida rattler. Field and Stream 12:771–772.
196 Wolff, N. O., and T. S. Githens. 1939. Record venom extraction from water moccasin. Copeia 1939:52.
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