NCWRC has pictures you can look for. Venomous snakes of NC are:
Northern Copperhead
Southern Copperhead
Timber Rattlesnake
Pygmy Rattlesnake
Esatern diamondback rattlesnake
Eastern coral snake
Cottonmouth
copperhead, cottonmouth, coral snake
No, there are no areas on Earth where every single snake in the region is poisonous. There probably are some poisonous snakes in the N. Carolina mountains, like rattlers, but certainly not all snakes.
There are only 6 species of venomous snakes found in North Carolina. Only 2 are found in Western North Carolina. These are the Western Copperhead and the Timber Rattlesnake.
Poisonous snakes are found all over the world. There are over a hundred species of snakes found in North America and only 4 of these species are poisonous.
No the scarlet king snake looks like a coral snake(poisonous) but the King snake is not Poisonous. There are other types of king snakes but none are poisonous.
Black Snakes, Copperheads, and several harmless water snake varieties. I live in Claremont.
There are no poisonous snakes, they are venomous. Venomous snakes have fangs. Some easy ways to tell native North American venomous snakes from native North American non-venomous snakes are they have cat-like pupils, triangular heads and the caudal scales are crossed rather than straight across. Not all venomous species are consistent with these signs, though. And some non-venomous snakes share their anatomical, behavioral, and color traits.
South Carolina is located on the North Western part of the hemisphere.. Look up pictures of the hemisphere on google.com
no not at all.They are common snake found in north American & they are non poisonous .actually gardner snakes are venomous.but fangs are to small to distribute it.
There are plenty of pests in North Carolina, including some types of beetle, snakes, rodents, and people who transplanted from New York, New Jersey, and California.
Mostly likely! there are only four types of poisonous snakes in north America and that is one of them.
Lots of plants, squirrels, birds, snakes, deer, worms, and decomposers.
The first Leonberger kennel in North Carolina is di Sforzando and is the home of many great, high quality, Leonbergers. Their website has pictures and lots of information available at www.kenneldisforzando.com