No. Some fish are extremely poisonous as well as the platypus and some insects.
Blue belly lizards, also know as western fence lizards are not poisonous, but can bite. The only poisonous lizard in the US is the Gila monster, which live in desert areas, such as Joshua Tree, San Bernardino and few in Death Valley.
There are many, foxes, birds, lizards, snakes and fish. The only poisonous snake is the adder and no ultra big whales. its a pretty big question!
Countless numbers of snakes are venomous, the number is constantly growing, but only two/three LIZARDS are venomous. The beaded lizard of Mexico, and the Gila monster of southern California and Mexico are positively poisonous. The third is poisonous based on ones perception of the word "venomous", the Komodo Dragon of Indonesia has a bacteria in its mouth that kills when injected into another animals body, so although it has no venom, it is poisonous.
Nope! Contrary to popular belief, sparked by the book "Holes" they are not poisonous! there are only two known poisonous lizards: the gila monster and the mexican beaded lizard. though yellow spotted lizards ARE real, they are no more threatening to humans as any other lizard.
No. Some lizards may guard their eggs but not their young. The only reptiles that guard their young are crocodiles and alligators.
Some lizards may eat seeds as part of their diet, but seeds are not a primary food source for most lizard species. Lizards are primarily carnivorous or insectivorous, meaning they mainly eat other animals such as insects, small mammals, or other reptiles.
Dinosaur, meaning 'terrible lizard' specifies that yes. Dinosaurs were only reptiles, as lizards too are reptiles.
Lizards are carnivores. They eat only meat. Lizards are reptiles, and have scaly skin. Small lizards eat small animals like insects.
An eel is a fish.
no blue belly lizards do not have teeth. they bite and they are not poisonous.
In most cases yes, but it really depends on the kind of snake:-) hope i could help:-)
Nope - all lizards belong to the group 'reptiles'