No there were no poisonous animals in the 10 plaques.
Spiders but nothing bigger then that
There are several poisonous animals that are found in the marine biome. These include jelly fish, sea urchins, and sea anemones.
Yes, in fact there are many snakes (more than a dozen) that are poisonous. other then that, I don't know.
Some frogs are poisonus. If animals eat them they will die.
Historically, the Ten Plagues occurred over the course of one year (Mishna, Eduyot ch.2), which according to traditional chronology was 1313-1312 BCE. The plagues, in order, were: Blood, frogs, lice, swarms of animals, death to the flocks, boils, hail, locusts, darkness, death to the firstborn.After the Plagues, Egypt was in turmoil for decades, as we may understand from the Ipuwer papyri (Professor John van Seters, Journal of Egyptian Archaeology no. 50). This (and evidence for the Exodus in general) may be seen here:http://www.academia.edu/1651319/Is_the_Exodus_Story_Possiblehttp://www.biblicalchronologist.org/answers/exodus_egypt.phpAnd the wider picture. Archaeology in general:http://judaism.answers.com/hebrew/does-archaeology-support-the-hebrew-bible
they provided nothing the animals were nothing to the egyptians becuase the animals them self couldnt find any food or water
Humans, lions, tigers, hyenas, crocodiles, poisonous snakes, natural disasters.
No Egypt's only animal is the camel. No other animal could survive in the desert without that big water hump.
Humans and other animals routinely eat poultry. Unless there exist very rare factors involving their diet - which would prove clearly detrimental to the health of the birds in any case - they are not poisonous.
LOL Please show me one of these 'popcorn plants'.
It is thought that chocolate can be poisonous to mice, but only in large amounts. Chocolate is poisonous to most all animals when consumed in large amounts.
The predator eventually learns to associate certain bright colours with danger, so they avoid eating animals with those colours, poisonous and non poisonous alike. What happens is a non poisonous species that look similar to poisonous ones are confused for being poisonous by the predators if they're colourful. The ones that look the most similar aren't eaten, and they're the ones who survive and pass on their genes, causing the following generations to look more and more like the poisonous ones. It's sort of "accidental" natural selection.