your togue
Hearing is the most valuable sense to a dolphin, as they use echolocation to navigate, communicate, and locate prey in the ocean.
Hawks have excellent eyesight and use their sharp talons to catch prey. They also rely on their keen sense of hearing to detect movement and locate potential prey. Additionally, hawks have a strong sense of spatial awareness that helps them navigate and hunt efficiently.
breathingWrong!The snake's tongue is an olfactory (sense of smell) organ.they smell with them. They stick the tongue out and then move each forked half into pockets in their head. There are sensors in the pockets that act like smelling. That is why their tongues are always going into the air and back into their heads.
yes snakes use their tongue to taste air.it is processed in Jacobson's organ on the roof of it's mouth.The primary use of a snake's tongue is smell and taste, using a flicking motion the tongue grabs particles from the air and runs them across the roof of its mouth, a sensory gland then translates the particles to smell and even taste. The primary use of a snake's tongue is smell and taste, using a flicking motion the tongue grabs particles from the air and runs them across the roof of its mouth, a sensory gland then translates the particles to smell and even taste.
Both predators and prey utilize camouflage as a strategy for survival. Predators may use camouflage to ambush their prey without being detected, while prey may use it to avoid detection and escape from predators. Camouflage helps both animals blend in with their surroundings and increase their chances of survival.
No, venomous snakes do not track their prey by smelling the venom they inject. Snakes use their sense of smell to locate prey, and once they bite and inject venom, the venom works to immobilize or kill the prey. Venom can also aid in digestion once the prey is consumed.
The little rat was an easy prey for the snake.
Injecting venom into its prey.
Frogs use the sense of smell to hunt down prey.
they use it to hide from predators and prey
The snake began to consume its prey.
The tongue of a snake does not play a role in eating and swallowing as it does for humans. Rather, snakes use their tongues to smell. The forked shape allows them a direction sense of smell to help the snake find prey.
To find food, the snake has to find it. They use their Jacobson's organ(an internal organ that allows snakes to locate their food by "smelling" it) or their "belly" scales to pinpoint their meal using the prey's vibrations(movements). Once the prey is found, the snake forms a "S" and strikes its meal and injects venom; this making the small animal more managable for the snake.
Some snakes use camouflage to hide themselves from prey using the plants around them. Some of snake's prey eat plants, so if plants disapeared, then so would snake's prey.
They use it to find prey and to sense any danger coming their way.
A Snake tracks it's prey by flickering its tongue. This is how a snake smells its prey. Most vipers use their tongue as well as their heat sensitive pits located near their eyes. This allows them to detect variations in temperature. A snake does not have a nose to smell nor are they able to hear, as all snakes are def.
It is the largest snake in the world, and does not use venom to kill its prey.