Rattlesnakes release their venom through their fangs
No. Venomous snakes can control when they release venom.
Snakes cannot remove their venom glands under any circumstances. There is no need to. Venomous snakes can control when they release venom.
If they don't have venom, then they're not venomous snakes. If the question is why some snakes don't inject venom on particular bites despite being members of a venomous species... Some species can choose to release venom or not release venom. They may not inject venom on a "warning bite" and instead reserve it for hunting. Other species always inject venom ... if they have any. But they may have recently bitten something else and used up the venom supply, and the glands that produce it haven't had time to "recharge" the supply yet.
Venomous snakes do not give out a poison, they inject a venom by biting. Venom kills by being injected, a poison by being eaten. Snakes are not poisonous.
it is venomous
There is a species of snake called a garter snake
Snakes have a special gland that lets them hold their venom and it won't let the venom go in their body
Venom - Awesome Snakes album - was created in 2006.
Neurotoxic venom
no.
Yes. The venom of venomous snakes is often lethal to that of other. The exception is that many snakes are resistant to their own species' venom. Snakes that are adapted to eating other snakes may also have some venom resistance.
NOT ALL snakes have venom - most snakes kill by constriction. There are roughly 3,500 species of snake in the world and only about 400 species are venomous !