I'm assuming you're referring to Morelia viridis, the green tree python. It is a species of python found in New Guinea, islands in Indonesia, and Cape York Peninsula in Australia. Their habitat includes rain forests, bushes, shrubs. If you watch David Attenboroughs "A Blank on the Map", based in New Guinea, he finds one in a tree.
1. Sunny areas
2. Dense vegetation near water
3. Eastern United States
where dose a grass snake live
That depends. A variety of snakes are green that are not closely related. Some, such as the Greater Green Snake lay eggs while others such as the Green Tree Viper give birth to live young.
there is one main difference. The green mamba is a very venomous snake, while most tree snakes are just harmless tree dwelling snakes.
Grass snakes are really annoying and like to eat pieces of animal droppings, especially those of the adder. It lives about 2,000,000 years and take their shed skin with them for all these years!
Yeah. Snakes that live in water, live in water.yes snake can live in water but not for longer period of time . it depend upon which types os snakes is ?
Not all snakes, but some do. For exampe, the sea snake swims, along with the green anaconda. But, the green tree boa does not.
=Yes, they do.=
20 years longest tree snake years and 3 months
the amazon rainforest in low trees our the forest floor
Every living thing needs food.
That depends. A variety of snakes are green that are not closely related. Some, such as the Greater Green Snake lay eggs while others such as the Green Tree Viper give birth to live young.
Sandalwood tree snakes live.
No. Green tree snakes eat frogs and other small reptiles, and occasionally fish.
"i think ... that moss and some snakes do live with the kapok tree but toucans live on the kapok tree."
there is one main difference. The green mamba is a very venomous snake, while most tree snakes are just harmless tree dwelling snakes.
Except during mating, the green tree snakes are solitary. Late fall and winter are their breeding months. As they live in dense vegetation, they are virtually invisible to the naked eye when resting.
17,in Australia
An emerald tree boa is a stunning sight. There are two varieties, the Suriname and the Amazon. Both are yellow-green with white spots. The Emerald Tree boa does hibernate.