No, it is a genetic impossibility.
Rattlesnake
Some of the kinds of snakes that live in Bishop, California include the Pacific rattlesnake and the California king snake. The California Mountain kingsnake and the Northwestern garter snake are also found in that area.
King snakes are essentially constrictors, which kill their prey by suffocating them. The modus operandi of a king snake is to first bite the victim ( a rattle snake) and then rapidly throw coils around the anterior body of the rattle snake, tightening them continuously so that the rattle snake is not able to breathe. The king snake maintains this tight coil until the rattler is dead. It then releass the coil, uses its forked tongue (and Jacobson's organ) to find the rattler's head and proceeds to swallow the prey. During this process, even if the king snake is bitten by the rattler, it does not matter as the king snake is immune to the venom of its prey.
That depends on which snake it is, if its a cobra, the snake prolly win, if its a python snake, the lizard may win.. it all depends on what the snake is ^^
There are numerous species of snakes in the US, including the Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake, Western Diamondback Rattlesnake, Timber Rattlesnake, Copperhead, Cottonmouth, Coral Snake, and various species of garter snakes, rat snakes, and kingsnakes, among others.
black mamaba faster then other but king cobra can kill easly mamba not sure abaut rattlesnake
A rattlesnake is generally considered a secondary consumer, sometimes a tertiary.
Well it depends on how you look at it, a bite from a rattlesnake would obviously be alot more serious than that of a kingsnake bite, but if it were like a fight with the two whichever one is bigger would most likely be the one to win, the KINGsnake gets it name from being impervious to venom, therefore the kingsnake could consume the rattlesnake without harm.
The Rattlesnake live there and it is venomous. The King Snake lives there and it is not, The Cotton mouth lives there and it is venomous. The garter snake lives there and it is not. The Copperhead lives there and it is venomous.
The Kings Snake was naturally located in Southern California and Northern Mexico.
There are 11 Poisonous Snakes in the world; the ff are the 11 Poisonous snakes in the world: 1-Belcher's Sea Snake, 2-Inland Taipan, 3-Common Indian Krait, 4-Phillippine Cobra, 5-King Cobra, 6-Russell's Viper, 7-Black Mamba, 8-Yellow Jawed Tommygoff, 9-Multibanded Krait, 10-Tiger Snake, 11-Jararacussu
Yes, there are a variety of snake species that live in Vermont. According to the Vermont Reptile and Amphibian atlas this includes: North American Racer, Timber Rattlesnake (very rare), Ring-necked Snake, Milksnake, Northern Watersnake, Smooth Greensnake, Eastern Ratsnake, DeKay's Brownsnake, Red-bellied Snake, Eastern Ribbonsnake, and of course, the Common Gartersnake.