yes
Yes, of coarse. They are very deadly.
Yes, of COURSE. But they are not very deadly. One out of one thousand bites is fatal, and there are an average of two thousand bites a year. Plus, the fatal ones are usually sustained by infants or someone allergic to the venom.
yes but are you trying to say venomous?
Yes. They are pit vipers, along with copperheads and cottonmouths, and all members of this family are venomous.
Rat snakes and rattle snakes are not the same thing. Rat snakes are constrictors, and have little to no venom. Rattle snakes are venomous and have large quantities of venom. Rat snakes are commonly kept as pets, but rattlesnakes are not.
rattle snakes coil and emit the hiss sound of its rattle. When they coil that is the position were they can do the jump to attack and bite injecting the venom.
Absolutely not! Though I've seen cats kill and consume small snakes I know that they are far more likely to be a victim if bitten by rattle snakes. The poison of Rattle snakes is very dangerous to mammals like cats and dogs and your pets should be kept away from these types of snakes at all times.
Their rattle, obviously, along with their venom, their solenoglyphous venom delivery system, ovoviviparity, and the fact that they are Crotaline snakes means that they have heat-sensing "pits".
The possessive form for "the rattle of the snake" is the snake's rattle.
no, venom is in the head not the tail
The Arizona black rattlesnake is black and has a rattle.
It's not really known, but it is said that hissing is a form of communication. Rattle snakes rattle their rattle to communicate too.
No. Bull Snakes typically hunt and eat Rattle Snakes, and the snake is typically a solitary animal. However, Bull Snakes will mimic Rattle Snakes by flattening themselves and shaking their tails.
rattle snakes
Rattle snakes are their prey.
absolutely, lots of snakes, especially rattle snakes