Well, that would be the same as asking how big can, for example, felines can get. There are a few dozens of feline species, and no one can answer that they reach this or that size, since a tiger and a house cat fit in the same taxonomical category.
Well, snakes belong to the suborder Serpentes, and there are probably more than 2900 species of snake. The most massive, the biggest, in terms of volume, is undoubtedly the green anaconda (Eunectes murinus), which can measure up to 7 metres (though its average size is of about 5 metres) and can attain a weight of almost an hundred kilograms. The thinner, but indeed the longest snake is the reticulated python (Python reticulatus). They can get up to 8 metres or a bit more, although they rarely do so, maintaining an average size of 3 to 6 meters.
Western diamondback rattlesnake - crotalus atrox.Eastern diamondback rattlesnake - crotalus adamanteus.
Eukaryote
Animalia
Western Diamondback Rattlesnake.The western diamondback rattlesnake.The Western Diamondback Rattlesnake. The genus Crotalus refers to rattlesnakes, and the genus Sistrurus to pygmy rattlesnakes, differentiated by size and 9 large scales on the top of their head.The Western Diamondback Rattlesnake. The genus Crotalus refers to rattlesnakes, and the genus Sistrurus to pygmy rattlesnakes, differentiated by size and 9 large scales on the top of their head.
For a range map of the western diamondback rattlesnake, click on this link.
The western diamondback rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox) lives in the deserts in the western United States.
There are two species, the eastern diamondback, and the western diamondback.
Crotalus atrox is the western diamondback rattlesnake.
The western diamondback rattlesnake.
Western diamondback rattlesnake.
The largest reported measurement for a western diamondback rattlesnake is 92.5 inches (Jones, 1997)
Both te eastern and western diamondbacks are from the crotalus genus:Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake - Crotalus adamanteusWestern Diamondback Rattlesnake - Crotalus atrox