A snake's tongue is a 'sensory organ'. Each side of the tongue is monitored separately by the brain - enabling the snake to determine which way to go in search of food.
Snakes don't have a very good sense of smell through their noses, the tongue has a sensor in it that the snake can "sense" danger, food, water and more things they need to survive. Without the tongue the snake wouldn't last too long
The tongue is used to help the snake find food and to respond to its environment. It can sense a source of heat with the tongue telling it if there is an animal near or danger. Some snakes have a gland behind the tongue that allows them to spit venom. The cobra is one snake that can do this.
Actually, the tongue is very important for a snake. While a snake's eyesight and hearing are only average, its sense of smell is very intense, thanks in large part to its tongue. A snake's tongue may look strange, but it helps the snake to experience various aromas in its environment: for example, it flicks its tongue as a way to smell the air and detect if there is prey in the area or if there is some kind of threat.
Snakes don't have a very good sense of smell through their noses, the tongue has a sensor in it that the snake can "sense" danger, food, water and more things they need to survive. Without the tongue the snake wouldn't last too long
The olfactory receptors at the back of the nasal chamber.
While a snake's forked tongue looks dangerous, it really is not. Snakes actually smell with their tongues. If snakes bite, they use their teeth
snakes use their teeth to catch their pray then suffocate them with the tongue
A snake uses its forked tongue to collect scents and then flicks them into the Jacobson's organ on the roof of the mouth.
Snakes use their tongue to smell. tongue collect smell particles from air and tongue places the collected particles in a receptor at back of the mouth to analize the smell.
No. There is not a set tongue color for poisonousand harmless snakes. A garter snake has both red and black on its tongue
by climbing up in trees
The tongue is used to help the snake find food and to respond to its environment. It can sense a source of heat with the tongue telling it if there is an animal near or danger. Some snakes have a gland behind the tongue that allows them to spit venom. The cobra is one snake that can do this.