yes
Snakes are close cousins to lizards, as they both belong to the same group of reptiles called Squamata. They share a common evolutionary ancestor and have similar characteristics such as scales and a forked tongue.
A snake is an organism that is a third-order heterotroph. Snakes belong to the third trophic level. There are approximately 3,000 species of snakes.
yes
they are reptiles, predators, prey, cold blooded, and vertabrates.
No, they have the same number of holes in their bodies.
Yes. All snakes are animals in the kingdom Anamalia.
The same as in the wild... snakes, small mammals, small lizards.
Lizards and snakes are both reptiles; they have scaly skin, they lay eggs, they have generally similar physiology (although lizards have legs and snakes don't).
Lizards, snakes, crocodiles, alligators, caimans, gavials, chameleons, geckos, monitors, basilisks, amphisbaenians, iguanas, snapping turtles, terrapins, tortoises and turtles are examples of reptiles. It is widely thought that dinosaurs were all reptiles too. There were also many predinosaurian (true) reptiles. Pelycosaurs were related to mammal like reptiles which were also 2 predinosaurian groups of reptiles. Pterosaurs and ichthyosaurs mainly lived at the same time as the dinosaurs and were flying and swimming reptiles respectively.
Snakes, lizards, and several species of insects can be found in both China and Australia.
same as all monitor lizards and snakes! using their tongue and sense of smell :)
Same exact organs as you and me, but in a different package (snakes have one lung though, and snakes, monitors lizards, tegus, and some other lizards have a Jacobson's organ like cats, which allows for better smell, and directional smelling but the reptiles mentioned use their tongue for smell, and snakes have no nostrils).