A bite from a coral snake injecting 3-5mg of venom, is usually fatal. Compare that to the Mojave rattle snake which would have to inject three times that amount. The actual yield from 'milking' a Coral snake would be higher - and would depend on the size of the venom glands in each individual snake.
Uhmmm...yes?? How did you not know that?
The answer is yes. Coral snakes do actually have fangs.
All coral snakes are fatal. Their venom is a neurological toxin.
With venom ! They are a highly-venomous snake !
Coral snakes possess highly-toxic venom - and will not hesitate to use it if they are threatened.
They feed on smaller Snakes, Lizards, Frogs, and nestling bhttp://wiki.answers.com/wiki/Birds and Rodentsetc.
Milk snakes are non-venomous and are harmless to humans. Despite their similar appearance to venomous coral snakes, milk snakes pose no threat to humans as they do not produce venom.
Some coral snakes are poisonous. Some are not. The ones that are poisonous have very powerful neurotoxic venom. Remember this saying.... if the color is red on yellow-kill a fellow if the color is red on black-venom lack
Coral snakes do not live in water.
Venomous snakes do not give out a poison, they inject a venom by biting. Venom kills by being injected, a poison by being eaten. Snakes are not poisonous.
The longest coral snake recorded in Texas measured about 5 feet in length. Coral snakes are known for their vibrant color patterns and potent venom, but they are generally not aggressive and rarely bite humans. While their length can vary, the average size of adult coral snakes typically ranges from 2 to 4 feet.
it is venomous