The Indian Cobra and the King Cobra are not the same species, but they both belong to the Elpidae (Elapid) family. Despite their name the Indian Cobra and the King Cobra are not as closely related as one might expect. The genus, Naja, contains what the majority of the population on earth call 'cobras'. The King Cobra does not belong to the Naja genus. It belongs to a different genus. The Indian Cobra on the other hand stays to true to it's name and is a species in the Naja genus.
yes, the Indian cobra is a spitting cobra
NO the Indian Cobra is NOT a spitter, the Indian Cobra or speckled Cobra has a "standard" envenomation through biting and cannot spit venom.
The term "cobra" may refer to any number of hooded, venomous snakes. The King Cobra is simply one of these snakes.
Indian cobra is not a king cobra.
King Cobras
no king cobras do not hibernate
the king cobra does symbolize a gang sign it symbolizes for the mickey cobras king cobras black king cobras spanish cobras young latin org cobras
No king cobras are green and yellow
Yes they do
Cobras stay in the same area for life.
King Cobras live in herd of 6 . A herd of King Cobras is called a quiver.
King Cobras can't hear but the are very dangerous
No, bats eat king cobras
The same way every other animal does it.
king cobras smell with their tongue.
Cobras are snakes, which are reptiles. All reptiles have scales, so, king cobras have dry, scaly skin.