There is nothing unusual about the eye of the king cobra. It works essentially the same way that the eye of any other vertebrate species works.
The King Cobra has a rounded eye with an elliptical pupil. The eyes are set on the side of the head, in front of the 'pit' and nostrils.
King cobras defend themselves by rising and raising their hoods. The hoods have the shape of an eye on each one, and make the king cobra seem larger to the predator. Then the king cobra bites, but if the grip on the predator isn't firm, they can't inject the venom. Or the king cobra could spit venom into the predators eye, causing temporary blindness so the it can escape. The predator should've run of when the king cobra gave it's warning signals (raised hood and hissing) from fear.
King cobras defend themselves by rising and raising their hoods. The hoods have the shape of an eye on each one, and make the king cobra seem larger to the predator. Then the king cobra bites, but if the grip on the predator isn't firm, they can't inject the venom. Or the king cobra could spit venom into the predators eye, causing temporary blindness so the it can escape. The predator should've run of when the king cobra gave it's warning signals (raised hood and hissing) from fear.
A king cobra will eat other snakes smaller than it,but there is no recorded case where a king cobra has eaten another king cobra.
No, the King Cobra is not endangered.
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No, a king cobra is not a frog.
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king cobra
If you go to the zoo, they might negotiate with you, but the king cobra would be very expensive.
King cobra is the king of snakes.
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