From its venom bag through its fangs.
A poisonous snake has venom glands in which it can inject venom when it bites. A non- poisonous snake has no venom glands and will not inject venom , but they can have harmful bacteria in their mouth.
No, because, actually, the snakes' venom is its' saliva (spit). -no kidding! And the species of snake is immune to its own venom. Hope this helps as well.
No, cats are not immune to snake venom.
Into the bloodstream.
not if it is a snake that when it bites you die right away but if it is a regular snake you will have to suck out the venom and then see what happens to the person
Depends on the snake mainly. And the size of the dog. And if/how much venom the snake decided to spend on the dog.
You pinch the skin really hard so the venom doesn't get in
Yes, cats can survive snake bites, but the outcome depends on factors such as the type of snake, the amount of venom injected, and how quickly the cat receives medical treatment.
If a venomous snake bites its own tongue nothing would happen. Venomous animals are immune to their own venom. If two rattlesnakes of the same species fight, neither will be harmed by the venom they inject.
Snake venom is stored in small 'sacs' in the jaw. They are joined to the fang by a short tube. The fangs themselves have a hole running the length of the tooth. When a snake bites its prey, the muscles in the jaw squeeze the sacs, which delivers a dose of venom out of the tips of the hollow fangs.
* To protect itself from predators * To help us produce anti venom to treat snake bites
Snakes that contan venom are venomous not poisonous. Which mean that the venom has to go through your blood steam to kill you. You can drink a whole cup of snake venom and you wont feel sick.