Theoretically yes - provided the keeper can provide a habitat to mimic its natural environment. HOWEVER - they are a highly-venomous species - and should NEVER be kept by a novice ! Most venomous snakes bite once then leave the victim to succumb to the toxins. Bushmasters deliver multiple bites - all injecting venom ! Even the bite of a juvenile specimen can be fatal to humans.
yes
amazon
From 3-4 pounds
The bushmaster is the most venomous snake in the Western Hemisphere--and yes, the South American bushmaster is found in the Amazon rainforest.
Bushmaster SnakePictures of Bushmaster Snakes The Bushmaster, lachesis muta muta is the largest Pit Viper in the world with a nasty reputation as a "cruel dude". The Bushmaster is a huge, thick-bodied and highly venomous snake with a triangularly shaped head, one of nature's warning signs that a snake is poisonous and potentially deadly. Bushmasters live in remote, heavily forested tropical jungle terrain. Isolated in their jungle environment, envenomation by a Bushmaster is very serious, sometimes fatal and particularly dangerous to humans.
pretty pretty please with a cherry on top answer my question
It is difficult to predict the outcome as it would depend on various factors such as size, age, and health of the snakes. Both species are highly venomous and aggressive, and a fight between them could be deadly for either snake.
Lachesis is the venom of the bushmaster snake, Lachesis mutus. It is used in homeopathic medicine.
The bush master snake lives in the tropical rainforests of central america.
See the related link to Wikipedia - for an excellent photograph.
it can grow up to 12 feet it can grow up to 12 feet
probably not, the snake would find it hard to adapt into the environment because it was raised by a human and not by its mother.