Only during the season of hibernation do rattlesnakes "socialize." Otherwise, the are solitary animals and do not run in 'packs."
The rattlesnake or copperhead, the rattlesnake is more venomous but the copperhead is more common.
I'm not sure about all the different kinds but i kno one kind is the Mojave rattlesnake
determined by the type of rattlesnake more species of rattlesnake are brownish beige or golden red brown.
The eastern diamondback is larger than the timber rattlesnake, and they would probably ignore each other in the wild.
no because they are immune to their own venom
The king cobra has a venom which is much more toxic than that of a rattlesnake. It is also much larger and can inject a greater amount of toxin.
one
One of the nabarleks predators is the rattlesnake.
A rattlesnake can strike its prey from a distance of about one-third to one-half of its body length, which is typically around 2 to 4 feet.
There is no species called the "desert rattlesnake" but there are dozens of species that live in the desert. The image above is one of them.
Common names include eastern diamondback rattlesnake, eastern diamond-backed rattlesnake, eastern diamondback, diamond rattlesnake, diamond-back rattlesnake, common rattlesnake, diamond-back, diamond(-patch) rattler, eastern diamond-back (rattlesnake), eastern diamond rattlesnake, Florida diamond-back (rattlesnake), Florida rattlesnake, lozenge-spotted rattlesnake, rattler, rattlesnake, southeastern diamond-backed rattlesnake, southeastern diamond-backed rattler, southern woodland rattler, water rattle, water rattlesnake, and diamondback rattlesnake.
Well it depends on how you look at it, a bite from a rattlesnake would obviously be alot more serious than that of a kingsnake bite, but if it were like a fight with the two whichever one is bigger would most likely be the one to win, the KINGsnake gets it name from being impervious to venom, therefore the kingsnake could consume the rattlesnake without harm.