If the female rattlesnake is receptive, the male will wrap his tail around her cloaca and insert a hemipenis which will impregnate her with sperm.
no they cant there genes dont match.
No, it is a genetic impossibility.
No, but the python could still be the rattle snake's main squeeze. Different species don't mate and produce offspring
Common names include eastern diamondback rattlesnake, eastern diamond-backed rattlesnake, eastern diamondback, diamond rattlesnake, diamond-back rattlesnake, common rattlesnake, diamond-back, diamond(-patch) rattler, eastern diamond-back (rattlesnake), eastern diamond rattlesnake, Florida diamond-back (rattlesnake), Florida rattlesnake, lozenge-spotted rattlesnake, rattler, rattlesnake, southeastern diamond-backed rattlesnake, southeastern diamond-backed rattler, southern woodland rattler, water rattle, water rattlesnake, and diamondback rattlesnake.
the sidewinder (Crotalus cerastes),speckled rattlesnake (C. mitchellii), Mojave rattlesnake, western rattlesnake (C. viridis), Hopi Rattlesnake, Midget Faced Rattlesnake, and Great Basin Rattlesnake
There are species of rattlesnake that live in all of the biomes listed in the question. Examples:Desert - western diamondback rattlesnake Mountain - rock rattlesnake Forest - timber rattlesnake Jungle - tropical rattlesnake
No, the rattlesnake is a snake - a reptile.
A rattlesnake.
Yes, it would, but the rattlesnake has poison.
Yes. It's officail name is Diamondback Rattlesnake.
A human can easily outrun a rattlesnake. However, the strike of a rattlesnake is quite rapid.
Yes - the Rattlesnake is in the Phylum Chordata.