No. Green tree snakes eat frogs and other small reptiles, and occasionally fish.
There is actually only one species of Dendrelaphis punctulata or the green tree snake that is native to Australia. There are many similar snakes, but only one actual green tree snake.
There are many popular species these days. They include Rat snakes, Boa constrictors, Royal pythons, Burmese pythons, Amethyst pythons, Green tree pythons, Green tree boas, Corn snakes, King snakes, Gopher snakes, African house snakes and many more. Boa constrictors and Burmese pythons are only for 'experienced keepers - as they grow very big - fairly quickly !
there is one main difference. The green mamba is a very venomous snake, while most tree snakes are just harmless tree dwelling snakes.
=Yes, they do.=
An emerald tree boa is a stunning sight. There are two varieties, the Suriname and the Amazon. Both are yellow-green with white spots. The Emerald Tree boa does hibernate.
Green tree snakes usually attack and eat chameleons.
sometimes, it depends, most snakes stick with their "type" but there have been rare cases when snakes interbreed.
Green tree snakes usually attack and eat chameleons.
in small bodies of water or on tree leaves or on tree branches
20 years longest tree snake years and 3 months
The green tree frog is subject to predation by many other animals. These include most climbing snakes, cane toads, the spotted quoll (tiger quoll) and birds such as kookaburras and owls.