Yes, snakes are predators and use camouflage to remain unnoticed by their prey for the best moment for a successful strike. The two forms of camouflage that snakes use are coloring to blend into their surrounding and stealth, the ability to remain motionless or to use slow movements to avoid catching the prey's attention.
The colors and patterns on their scales match their environment. Example, a green snake lives in the grass, it is camouflaged.
The camoflage matches the animals skin/pigment to the surrounding environment/foliage. Thus, keeping the animal hidden and safe from preditors.
Camouflaging is when a animal blends in to its background so a green python can blend in to a grass field.
Throgh there natural ways of life and the things around them. Some dont need it.
They don't, corns don't have the ability to camouflage
i hate you people
they camoflage so their prey wont see them
chameleon, boa constrictor, leopard, tree frogs, caimans, sloths, leaf katydid, horned frogs, leaf tailed gecko, imperial moth, great potoo, reticulated python, orchid mantis, and owl monkey. These are only some animals that camouflage in the rain forest!
Reticulated Python
camouflage
In a python
a python
This depends on your definition of camouflage. It can be said that all animals camouflage themselves to some degree, called Crypsis camouflage. i guess a crypsis camouflage
no shark do not camouflage
Camouflage
no they do not
Many insects use camouflage. Name one of the laws of camouflage.
Camouflage covers the entire spectrum of defense mechanisms employed by an animal to hide in its environment. It involves properties like "blending coloration", "cryptic behavior".