No. It is a well know fact that reptiles do not nurse.
Rattlesnakes give live birth. They are ovoviviparous.
Mammals produce milk. Snakes are not mammals. No milk. Nope.
Rattlesnakes apparently do sometimes lay eggs, though not until they're ready to hatch (usually they hatch while still inside the mother).
No. Rattlesnakes do not lay eggs; they give birth to live young.
Some species of snake lay eggs, but not the rattlesnake, they give birth to live young.
No. Although abertosaurus may have cared for its young it did not nurse them. Only mammals nurse their young.
Rattlesnakes are ovoviviparous - they incubate the eggs inside the body and the young are born alive.
Frogs and turtles do not nurse their young. Only mammals nurse their young. Frogs and Turtles are Amphibians.
When - like most animals, rattlesnakes produce young in late spring/early summer. Where - it depends on their natural habitat. How - once the young hatch, they are completely independent, so no parental care takes place.
All animals with hair nurse their young.
Rattlesnakes generally produce young every 2-3 years.
Yes, they do nurse them. All mammals nurse their young. Guinea pigs are mammals. They will nurse them for about 6 weeks after birth.
They don't. Once they've hatched they're on their own.
Rattlesnakes do not take care of the young, they are fully capable of looking after them selves at birth.