youve got red,black,yellow,orange.....its like all snakes have different colors.So technically,snakes have all the main colors we know now except pink.HEH
Yes. Corn snakes can be pink, coral, or opal among other colors. I don't know about other snakes but I'm sure there are others out there somewhere
It's possible it's going through the shedding process.
The Coral snake and Mexican Milk snake are similar because of their colors, they both have three colors: Red, Black, and yellow.Coral snakes are preety dangerous so some Mexican Milk Snakes are killed for confustion of being a coral snake.The only way I can think of to tell the to species apart is "red and black friend of jack but red and yellow could kill a fellow"
The milk snake got its name because people many years ago thought they drank milk directly from cows. The reason they thought that is because the snakes liked to hang around barns where the cows were kept. But they were not there for milk, they were there for the mice and rats which were feeding on the grain.
I think there only major predators are humans we hit them with are boats and catch them in fishing nets. There bright colors keep most natural preditors away the bright colors meen stay away I'm poisonus
Snakes colors vary from species to species. There are plain snakes that are only brown, grey, black or white. There are also colorful snakes. There are snakes that have patterns and multiple colorations. There is a snake for every color.
Brown, green etc.
black and yellow.
Snakes come in a wide variety of colors.
The king snake not see in yellow.
Yes. Corn snakes can be pink, coral, or opal among other colors. I don't know about other snakes but I'm sure there are others out there somewhere
no, they cannot see ultraviolet colors.
It's possible it's going through the shedding process.
Yes, Corn Snakes actually come in a variety of colors(including black, white, red, brown, albino, ect.).
1. Snakes are venomous, not poisonous. 2. You spelt poisonous wrong. 3. Colorful snakes would be more venomous because the bright colors warn predators, "Stay away I'm dangerous!".
There are no colors a snake can NOT be. Snakes are found on nearly every continent in the world in an array of colors. Sometimes those colors are vibrant, while for some dull-colored species the need to blend in to their environment is essential. No matter what shade or color combination a snake has, each snake's color is key to its survival as both hunter and prey. The most common snake colors are black, green, brown and yellow.
Snakes are different colors because of evolutionary processes that select for certain colors and traits that suit the animal for the habitats they find themselves in. For example, rattle snakes may tend to be darker in regions of the world that are cooler so that they can heat up more quickly than say a lighter variety.