Once the embryos start to form inside the female, she will be come irritable - perhaps even vicious (speaking from experience) if you try to handle her. You will notice, as the eggs start to form, that she develops slight swellings in the lower third of her body - just above her cloaca.
She may also go off her food - or take more food than usual. Once the eggs are formed - she will seek out a suitable place to lay her clutch - a place in the vivarium that is the exact temperature she needs for the eggs to develop and hatch. (Snakester1962 - Supervisor)
You'll be able to feel a tiny hard lump on their 'belly'
only if your an expert in snakes
the male king snake is a bit bigger then the female king snake and got lots of black on the belley and the female is a bit smaller then the male and does not have lots of black on its belley or take the king snake to a reptile pet shop and he will prob the snake and check if its male or feamale
take it to a restaurant and see which bathroom it goes into.
A female snake is a snake that is a girl and a male snake is a boy .
A female snake is a snake that is a girl and a male snake is a boy .
A king is a male and a queen is a female.
yes...
the both of them male and feamale
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female. The noun snake is a common gender noun, a word for both male and female. There are no gender specific nouns for male or female snakes.
snow(female) king(male)
It depends on the snake; for example: the female anaconda is larger than the male, but this is not always the case.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female. The noun snake is a common gender noun, a word for both male and female. There are no gender specific nouns for male or female snakes.
Female: Cow Male: Bull