Snake venom is classified into different segments. like he-mo toxic, Nero toxic, para toxic etc .. And the toxic contain in the snake venom attacks the particular system in the victims body and kills down to earth. ex: Nero toxic paralysis the nervous system, he-mo toxic kills the blood cells and numbs down the connection between brain, heart and the other connections.
I know that a snake's venom is deadly.
because it has venom that is so strong that it can kill over 250,000 mice
The Viper snake is an endangered animal with a mean bite. Vipers are one of the most deadliest snakes in the world due to their poisonous venom stored in glands within the mouth.
No, a poisonous snake bite can be deadly even if bitten shallow on the skin.
They are, but the venom is not deadly and the venom is delivered from the back of the mouth so the snake has to get you all the way back there and chew on you for a while.. In humans, it's just a minor irritant. In people who are more sensitive to bee stings and the like, it might be more painful.
They have a highly-potent venom.
the snake is only deadly to fish, but not to humans. it will take allot of bites to in pulse venom to interact to humans ( like one billion bites to be deadly) and is less than one percent deadly to humans.
Animals can be deadly for various different reasons. Some species of snake have deadly venom. Elephants are big enough to kill people by stepping on them. Lions have sharp claws and strong muscles. Aligators can pull people underwater and drown them. And so forth.
Yes! A deadly snake's venom can kill all most any thing even its own kind.
If it is a very potent poison, then, yes. It can.
Yes. if a species of snake is venomous, it has that venom from the very beginning.
Rattlesnakes are venomous but the venom is separate from other fluids produced by their bodies (blood, saliva etc.) The release of venom through its hollow fangs is controlled by the snake. When biting defensivly, as opposed to hunting prey, the snake may not release and venom at all when it bites.