There are the constrictors, which include the boa family and the python family. The venemous snakes such as cobras and rattle snakes. The non venomous snakes like garter snakes, king snakes, and the rat snake.
Watermoccasian,puff adder,cottonmamamba,black mamba,rat snake,yellow belly sea snake cobra,king snake,green mamba,
Not all snakes, but there are certain desert species that will.
It is possible for snakes of different species, and even genus to court and breed producing young. Common examples are found in rat snakes in which species interbreed, and King snakes and Rat snakes in which different genus have been known to hybridize.
Over 600 species of snakes are venomous.
There is a species of snake called a garter snake
There are 4 species of venomous snakes in Canada. The largest, the Prairie Rattlesnake, can grow to about 1.6 meters in length.
I believe that they are their own species.
There are approximately 3,500 species of snakes.
They're called Pond Snakes
snakes are the only species of snakes
Snakes are not extinct. Some species may be, but certainly all are not. Check Extinct Snake Species.
Sea snakes. That is the actual name of that species of snake. They are or are closely related to the kraits.
Snakes are not a single species, nor do they belong to a single genus. Snakes are a suborder of reptiles that contains 3,400 known species in over 500 genera. They belong to the suborder Serpentes in the order Squamata.
NOT ALL snakes have venom - most snakes kill by constriction. There are roughly 3,500 species of snake in the world and only about 400 species are venomous !
Garden Snakes and Corn Snakes
Yes - some species of garter snakes, and rat snakes are striped.
Snakes are not a species; they are a suborder containing hundreds of genera.
No. Corn snakes are a North American species.