Well there are many different snakes in the world so some snakes can have 100 or over a 100 like pythons.Different snakes have a different number of eggs.
snakes have a three-chambered heart - 2 atria and 1 ventricle
Technically, no snake is poisonous. However, some snakes are venomous. Only about 1 out of every 4 species of snake is venomous.
No snake is poisonous, but around 19% of the world's snakes are venomous. The U.S. is home to four kinds of venomous snake: the Cottonmouth, the Copperhead, the Coral snake, and the Rattlesnake
None. Garter snakes give birth to live young. A female garter snake may give birth to anywhere from 3 to 80 young.
no tats not true unless the snake is less then 1 foot
I'd say 1-45. I've found bull snakes laying eggs and I catch the female, And count the eggs.
There is but 1 snake, the most widely-spread snake in the world, the garter snake. They have been known to survive around the Arctic Circle, they are also the only snake to be found in Alaska.
One of the nicest snakes in the world is the corn snake it's always found in corn fields but even if they do bite you their bites always feel like just a pinch
1. Australian Taipan 2. eastern brown snake 3. death adder 4. tiger snakes
There are six different poisonous snakes in South Carolina.1. Copperhead2. Pigmy Rattle Snake3. Timber Rattle Snake (aka Canebrake Rattle Snake)4. Water Moccasin (aka Cotton Mouth)5. Coral Snake6. Eastern Diamondback Rattle SnakeThe Copperhead is the most common poisonous snake in SC, and the Eastern Diamondback Rattle Snake is the most deadly. The Water Moccassin, as it's name implies, lives mainly in or nearby water. The Coral Snake is the only representative in SC of a group of snakes called the Elapids. This group contains some of the worlds deadliest snakes including vipers, mambas, and many Australian snakes like the Taipan or the Tiger Snake. The Pigmy Rattle snake is by far the smallest of all the poisonous snakes in SC, it seldom reaches over a foot in length. Timber (or Canebrake) Rattle Snakes are fairly normal and are probably can be said to be the "average" rattlesnake.
The striking distance for a snake can vary depending on the species, but on average it is around half to two-thirds of the snake's body length. This distance allows the snake to accurately strike and capture its prey without having to move too far.
This is the snake that has made Manitoba's Interlake region world-famous for snake-watching! Some snake dens (or hibernacula, singular = hibernaculum) contain 10,000 garter snakes each winter. In spring their mass emergence creates an awesome natural spectacle The chances of a snake reaching 12 years of age are less than 1 in 5,000.. that is the best i got. you could also always say too many to count!