No, they have the same number of holes in their bodies.
To give a whole list of names would be long but here is the extreme shorted version. Lizards, snakes, tuatara, alligators, crocodiles, amphisbaenians (these look like worms, oddly.)
No. Snakes swalloe their food whole. Alligators will swallow smaller prey whole, and tear ar larger prey.
Snakes are members of the Order Squamata, which also includes lizards. They are elongated, legless reptiles with flexible bodies and jaws that allow them to swallow prey whole. Snakes play important roles in ecosystems as both predators and prey.
Monitor lizards, snakes, cone snails, many birds, amphibians, most cartilaginous fish and baleen whales (with zooplankton) can swallow prey whole.
Not all reptiles dwell on land. Some of them live in the water, such as crocodiles, marine iguanas and sea snakes. Even these reptiles must come to land sometimes, to bask, or lay eggs.
All snakes are strictly carnivorous, eating small animals including lizards, other snakes, small mammals, birds, eggs, fish, snails or insects. Because snakes cannot bite or tear their food to pieces, prey must be swallowed whole. The body size of a snake has a major influence on its eating habits. Smaller snakes eat smaller prey. Juvenile pythons might start out feeding on lizards or mice and graduate to small deer or antelope as an adult, for example.
Most people feed frozen/thawed rats or mice, and rabbits and pigs for larger snakes. Some species of snakes have to be fed lizards, frogs, other snakes and chickens at first, but should eventually be switched to mammalian prey. I don't support feeding pigs as they are fatty and not as healthy for the snake, rabbits are much better. Snakes need whole prey to get the proper nutrition they need.
Gopher snakes primarily eat small mammals such as rodents, including mice, rats, and gophers, as well as birds, eggs, and occasionally lizards. They are constrictors, meaning they will suffocate their prey by coiling around them before swallowing them whole.
no, snakes as a whole are not endangered, but certain species of snakes are
you compare them
Snakes primarily hunt and capture their prey by using their keen sense of smell and special heat-sensing organs to detect potential meals. Once a snake identifies a target, it strikes quickly with its fangs to inject venom or constricts the prey to subdue it before swallowing it whole. Some snakes may also scavenge for food if the opportunity arises.
They wrap around there prey until it dies then eats it whole. It's jaw could dislocate which is how it eats huge animals whole but that 1 meal could last months for them depending on if it's a wild or a home pet snake. Also they wrap around there pray squeeze until the body stops working then the snakes jaw dislocates so the snake can swallow its pray whole