According to "Reptiles and Amphibians" by Mark O'Shea and Tim Halliday, it is related to the Dharaman Ratsnake. Feel free to add on whoever is reading this.
The king cobra belongs to the family Elapidae.
The coral snake, black mamba, and the death adder.
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.
The king cobra was eventually assigned its own genus Ophiophagus which is separate from the genus Naja to which other cobra species belong.
A king cobra is one of the species of the snake family, all of which are reptilian animals.
Black snakes belong to the cobra family
the opposite of the constrictor i dont know what its called T.T
A king cobra is not a mammal. A king cobra is a reptile and can live to 20 years of age.
There are spitting cobras and king cobras, but there aren't any spitting king cobras. Their scientific names are Ophiophagus Hannah (the king cobra), and there are at least 6 species of spitting cobras. These are Naja nigricollis, Naja siamensis, Naja pallida, Naja nubiae, Naja mossambica, and Naja ashei. King cobras and spitting cobras belong to separate genera (the king cobra is from the Ophiophagus genus and spitting cobras are from the Naja genus), but they both belong to the Elapidae family of snakes. The Elapidae family belongs to the Alethinophidia infraorder, the Serpentes suborder, the Squamata order, and the class Reptilia.
chordata
A king cobra will eat other snakes smaller than it,but there is no recorded case where a king cobra has eaten another king cobra.
No, the King Cobra is not endangered.