A snake doesn't really 'smell' to say the least. They have a special organ in the nasal cavity of their skulls called the Jacobson's Organ. When they flick their tongue out, they use that organ to sense any nearby prey or threat. So in a sense, they 'smell' while they taste the air.
A snake collects the scents in the air on its tongue (hence the tongue flicking in and out periodically) and then rubs its tongue on the scent organs on the roof of its mouth.
snakes hate the smell
they smell like snake
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 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.
They smell with their tongues
A Snake Probably
snakes hate the smell
Poo and Pee
Snakes breath through nostrils like you and me, but if you mean how do they smell, then the snake's sense of smell is in it's tongue, which is why snakes flick their tongues a lot.
I wasn't aware that snakes have a distinct smell, maybe you need a good bath :P
A snake uses its forked tongue to collect scents and then flicks them into the Jacobson's organ on the roof of the mouth.
the Jacobson's organ
Cucumbers, but only when it's startled.
Copperheads This is, in fact, myth. Copperheads do not smell like cucmber and rattlesnakes do not smell like watermelon.
its their sense of smell but it depends on what snake your talking about
The snake flicks it's tongue to capture smell molecules carried on the air. The tongue then brushes against the Jacobson's organ inside the roof of the mouth, to annalyse the smell for possible prey or danger.