2 Mississippi Scorpions

Southern Devil Scorpion

The state of Mississippi has two different species of scorpions. These are the Southern Devil Scorpion (Vaejovis carolinianus) and the Striped Bark Scorpion (Centruroides vittatus)

Striped Bark Scorpions and Southern Devil Scorpions have stings that are no more medically significant than a wasp sting. However, all scorpion stings have the potential to cause severe allergic reactions such as anaphylactic shock. If you have blurred vision, muscle spasms, or difficulty breathing after experiencing a scorpion sting, seek immediate medical attention.

Southern Devil Scorpion
Southern Devil Scorpion image by johnabrams1982

Southern Devil Scorpion (Vaejovis carolinianus)

People associate scorpions with the dry arid country of the American desert southwest. However, there are also scorpion species that are native to parts of the moist, humid southeast. The southern devil scorpion is one of these.

This scorpion species, which also has the common name Southern Unstriped Scorpion or Carolina devil scorpion, is native to all or parts of North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Virginia, West Virginia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Kentucky.

In Mississippi, these scorpions mainly live in the northeastern part of the state. In particular, they live in Tishomingo County and the counties that border it.

Although Southern Devil Scorpions pack a painful sting, the venom of this species is not considered to be medically dangerous to normal healthy individuals. People that have been stung by one report that the pain intensity is very similar to a wasp sting.

What do Southern Devil Scorpions look like?

All scorpions look a little bit like tiny land-dwelling lobsters with some distinctions. Lobsters have 10 legs, while scorpions have 8, and of course, lobsters don’t have a bulbous venom-filled stinger on the end of their tail, while scorpions do.

Southern Devil Scorpion adults are about 1.5 inches long and are dark brown in color.

Southern Devil Scorpion Behavior

Just like the Striped Bark Scorpion that we’ll talk about below, Southern Devil Scorpions are nocturnal hunters. During the day, they take shelter in leaf piles, under rocks, in crawl spaces, and beneath wood litter on the forest floor. They are very skittish and would rather hide from you than sting you.

They only use their stinger for defense or to subdue their prey. Their prey, by the way, consists of small insects and arachnids, such as spiders.

Like all scorpions, Southern Devil scorpions have compounds in their exoskeletons that glow under black light. To see them after dark, consider investing in a UV flashlight.

Striped Bark Scorpion
Striped Bark Scorpion by Patrick Randall

Common Striped Bark Scorpion (Centruroides vittatus)

Striped Bark Scorpions, which also go by the common names Plains Scorpion, Wood Scorpion, or Stripe Backed Scorpion, are Buthid Scorpions, just like the Arizona Bark Scorpion. However, their sting is not nearly as dangerous as that of the Arizona Bark scorpion. Common Striped Bark Scorpions are the most common scorpions in the United States. Thousands of people are stung by them each year when they step on them with bare feet or come into accidental contact with them in some other manner.

Unlike Northern Scorpions and Northern Black Hairy Scorpions, which never venture far from their burrows, Striped Bark Scorpions are wandering hunters. Like all bark scorpions, they are natural climbers. Besides living under rocks, they climb trees and fence posts and have no problem climbing the walls of your home. They actually have a negative geotaxis, or in other words, they prefer an upside-down orientation. See

Striped Bark Scorpions live in a variety of environments, such as woodland, grassland, and desert. During the day, they will take shelter in a variety of hiding places, such as under loose stones, beneath loose bark, or in wood stacks, etcetera.

Like all scorpions, they are nocturnal creatures and will be under shelter until after sundown. What’s more, as all scorpions do, they have fluorescent compounds in their exoskeletons that make them glow under black light. If you are camping in an area where northern scorpions are active, it’s a good idea to go armed with an ultraviolet flashlight. Use the ultraviolet light to scan your campsite after dark.

The range of the striped back scorpion begins in the northern Mexico states of Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon, and Tamaulipas. It then extends northward up to the southern counties of Nebraska. Their range also extends longitudinally from the Sangre de Cristo mountains and Rio Grande of New Mexico in the west and the Missouri River and the Mississippi River in the east. The following U.S. states have populations of striped bark scorpions: Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Illinois, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Florida, Georgia, and Texas.

In Mississippi, striped bark scorpions are found from the central part of the state south to the gulf coast.

In areas with colder wintertime temperatures, striped bark scorpions by tolerating limited freezing of their body tissue. These scorpions then hibernate through the winter months.

What do striped bark scorpions look like?

Like Southern Devil Scorpions, Striped Bark Scorpions look a little bit like tiny land lobsters.

Adult striped bark scorpions are up to 2 3/4″ long. An adult of this species is uniformly pale yellow in color, with the exception of two longitudinal dark stripes that run the length of its back and a dark triangle at the top of their heads.

Striped Bark Scorpion Behavior

Striped Bark Scorpions mate in the fall and also occasionally in spring or early summer. The mating process begins with the male engaging the female scorpion in an elaborate mating dance called the promenade a deux. At this time, the male maneuvers the female to a spot where he can deposit a sperm packet called a spermatophore for her reception.

The male must hold the female over the spermatophore long enough for her to receive it. Therefore, larger males successfully mate a larger percentage of the time.  If the female accepts the male’s spermatophore, the pair join together and rub chelicera in the “kiss” stage. At this point, the female takes up the spermatophore. What follows is about an 8-month gestation, after which their offspring are born alive.
After the newborn northern scorpions free themselves from the birth membrane, they will climb up their mother’s walking legs and onto her back. The young scorpions ride there on their mother’s back in a grouped formation, only climbing down to feed on pellets that the female scorpions create for them when she feeds until they are sufficiently old to strike out on their own. This is generally after their first molt. See

Also see:

Wild Cats in Mississippi

Venomous Snakes of Mississippi

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