Hot since they are cold blooded.
No, there are no snakes in the North Pole. It is too cold, and being cold-blooded, snakes rely on the environment to maintain their body temperature. They could not survive the North Pole's climate.
No. Lions are adapted to a warm climate and hunt the grazing animals of the African grasslands. The cold, harsh climate of the northern taiga is only suitable for animals that have evolved ways of coping with it.
Because your blood thins out while living in warm weather
Snakes, and in fact all reptiles, are cold blooded. This means they can't independently increase or decrease their body temperature and need an external source (the sun, for example) to do so. This means Antarctica, with its polar climate, is way too cold for them to survive in. If they did live in Antarctica their blood would freeze up almost instantly. Also, there isn't a stable food source for snakes to survive on in Antarctica. This is why you won't find snakes, or indeed any type of reptile, in Antarctica.
Yes. All snakes are cold-blooded.
cold blooded
the climate for the Iroquois was warm summers and cold temperatures in the winter which could go below zero
no snakes are not warm blooded they are cold blooded although some snakes do not bite but are still cold blooded
Snakes are usually most active in the summer, as they are cold blooded reptiles and the heat helps them warm up and become active.
no, all snakes and reptiles are cold blooded
snakes and all other reptiles are cold blooded :)