the help to pull the mouse down its throat.
Ball pythons in particular have rather sharp teeth and thick teeth.
Pythons have 4 rows of teeth on the top and 2 rows of teeth on the bottom. Pythons do not have fangs.
no. they have lots of little tiny sharp teeth
No, pythons are non-venomous. Although they do have teeth.
Ball pythons typically develop their first set of teeth shortly after hatching, usually within the first few weeks of life. These teeth are small and curved, designed for gripping and holding onto prey rather than chewing. As they grow, ball pythons will shed their teeth periodically, but they generally have a sufficient number of functional teeth to capture and consume prey throughout their lives.
They Have recurve teeth, teeth that curve towards the back of the mouth. This helps the african rock python hold the prey in so it cant pull back out of it mouth. Reticulated pythons, Burmese pythons, and anacondas also have these teeth as do many other types of large snakes in the boide family.
pythons can unlatch their jaw to eat large prey whole, they only use their teeth to poison prey.
It depends on the species - large pythons can have more than sixty !
No - but they do have many tiny teeth for holding onto their prey as they suffocate it.
pythons are constrictors, they have no venom. their teeth fork backwards so that when their prey tries to pull out they get hooked like on a fish hook then they wrap around and suffocate their prey
yes
A blood python is a completely different type of snake Ball pythons are easier to take care. Blood pythons are known to be aggressive and you need high humidity for blood pythons, Blood pythons also need a place to soak in there enclosure. Ball pythons are a lot more docile then blood pythons. If your a beginner get a ball python. Blood pythons get to 4-6 foot while ball around get around 4 foot. Hope this helped.