Blue racers that were recorded on more than one occasion were rarely caught again at the original location. For different individuals, distances between capture points ranged from zero up to a little more than three-fourths of a mile. The area of concentrated study was a mile and a half in greatest diameter; there was scant opportunity for capturing racers that moved greater distances. Even those that moved as far as a mile would have passed beyond the boundaries of the study area in most instances. Many of the marked racers that disappeared from my records probably moved beyond the limits of the study area. Nevertheless, in the great majority of instances, the distances between successive capture points for the same individual were relatively short, indicating that each racer tends to remain permanently in a restricted area.
Most captures were made in the type of grassland or brush that provides favorable habitat for the racer during the season of activity, but many other captures were made in woodland along the rock ledges where the snakes come to hibernate. Four different types of movement may be recognized: 1) those in the rock ledge area where hibernation occurs; 2) those between the area where the summer is spent and the hibernation ledge—an actual small scale seasonal migration which takes place in spring and autumn—3) those within a home range, which are part of the day-to-day activities of the racer, and, 4) wandering movements by which the racer shifts its activities, perhaps permanently, from one area to another. In the records of any one snake these different types of movements cannot always be sorted with certainty. Each type will be discussed separately.
Relatively few movements along the ledges were recorded. It seems that having migrated to a ledge, the racer promptly finds its hibernaculum and retires for the winter. In spring there is equally prompt scattering of the emerging racers, which no longer find the ledge attractive. Most recorded movements along the ledges were short. Of 76 movements, nine exceeded 1000 feet, and only four others exceeded 500 feet. Most of the shorter movements were recorded within an autumn season, but several were recorded after the lapse of one or more seasons of activity. The longer movements were as follows: 1250 feet after 8 seasons (male); 1300 feet after three seasons (female); 1600 feet after one season (female); 2000 feet after one season (female); 2280 feet after seven seasons (male); 2200 feet in same season (female); 2410, 2600, and 3200 feet, each after one season (all males). The trend of these records suggests that the tendency to return year after year to the same hibernaculum is not strong; after using one for a period of years, the racer may abandon the stretch of ledge and, starting out in the opposite direction from its summer range, find a new hibernaculum as much as half a mile from the old one. Records of distances between capture points on the ledges for individual racers are shown in [Fig. 12].
A total of 124 movements between summer ranges and ledges were recorded, and the distances averaged 1309 feet—approximately a quarter mile. Some racers living in hilltop fields may have had home ranges that included rock ledges, or at least were adjacent to them. In such instances no seasonal migrations would have been necessary to reach hibernacula in the autumn and summer ranges in the spring. Several short movements—100 feet, 150 feet, and 200 feet—can be explained on the basis that home ranges and hibernation ledges overlapped or were near at hand, but most of the movements were longer. The longest movement was 4020 feet, after a lapse of four seasons. Twenty-four movements exceeding 2000 feet were recorded. For these the intervals between captures averaged more than double the time for the remaining movements, indicating that the longtime permanent shifts were involved in many instances.
Fig. 9. Histogram of movements of blue racers between hilltop rock outcrops used for hibernation, and summer habitat on the Reservation and Rockefeller Tract. Movements of females tend to be somewhat shorter than those of males.
For all the racers living in bottomland, ranges were separated from ledges by areas of wooded hillsides averaging approximately 700 feet across. These relatively unfavorable areas had to be traversed in the course of the semi-annual migrations. Even some of the racers that lived in hilltop fields apparently crossed wooded slopes in order to reach distant hibernation ledges, or else each reached the ledge by a roundabout route although it could have found a ledge much nearer its summer range. For the 124 ledge-to-field and field-to-ledge movements, the median distance was 1030 feet. The sexes were almost equally represented in this sample but the average distance for the 55 males—1425 feet—notably exceeded that for the 69 females—1220 feet. These movements are shown in [Fig. 9].
McCauley (1945:76) in Maryland described what seemed to be incipient territoriality in a large male racer that remained several hours in a small area, crawling about conspicuously with head raised, seemingly on patrol. When an even larger male racer intruded, the first one aggressively drove him away, but neither paid any attention to a king snake that was also on the area. Other authors have noted the attachment of a racer to a small familiar area. Conant (1938:53) wrote that many of the racers he saw sought shelter in definite retreats. One of these racers was seen resting on top of a brush pile four times in a single afternoon, and each time it followed the same route to the same inaccessible spot beneath the brush.
My own observations do not bear out the idea that racers maintain regular territories, since several males may be present within a small area, even in the breeding season. Hostile behavior between males has not been observed by me under natural conditions, and in confinement has been seen only in instances of self defense. Like the racer Conant observed on a brush pile, individuals may linger in the vicinity of a favored shelter or foraging area for periods of hours, but such associations are ephemeral, and soon the snake moves on. In a uniformly favorable habitat a racer may cruise about freely in tall grass or brush. Individuals that I have attempted to follow, after flushing them or releasing them from traps, often covered distances of 100 to 300 feet within periods of a few minutes before I lost them. In such instances I maintained sufficient distance between myself and the snake so that the latter was not actively escaping. Probably the snake was not aware of pursuit in most instances, although I was able to glimpse it through the stems of grass, weeds, or shrubs, or was informed of its course by the swaying tops of grass and other vegetation.
For many of the racers captured over periods of years it was possible to plot "minimum home ranges" in the areas that they occupied. One caught 12 times in five consecutive years will serve as a typical example. There were seven locations involved; three captures were made at one point and two captures at each of two others; the other five locations were each represented by a single capture. One of the seven locations was for a capture made at a rock ledge in October, and hence can be eliminated from considerations of home range. The other six locations are based upon captures made from late May to early August, and they form a rhomboid pattern, with three locations in alignment on one side and two others inside the quadrangular figure formed by the five outlying points. Obviously such a group of records gives some idea of the location and extent of the snake's activities but the information is far from complete. As shown by Odum and Kuenzler (1955), a much larger series of records, usually several dozen, with eight or more marginal locations, is necessary to illustrate even an approximation of the actual home range. Under the conditions of my study such a series of records was unattainable. Few if any of the racers recaptured had more complete series of records than the one mentioned above.