Unless you plan on breeding them, there's no reason to, just pick a gender to call it.
If you really need to know, there are several methods. The only method I would recommend without veterinary assistance is not very accurate unless you've had allot of practice, and that is to compare then length of the tail past the cloaca, males usually have longer, more slender tails. The other methods are 'popping' and 'probing', but unless you are experienced this is best left to a breeder or vet.
Unless you know what your doing it's pretty impossible to tell any type of snakes gender. The only 100% way is to breed but other then that a proffesional can either pop or prob the snake
Rat snakes are generally black whereas corn snakes are orangey yellowy and look like ground up corn.
Bananas Snakes eat rats and chickens.
Yes, but it is a freak anomaly like say, Siamese Twins or a Girl with three breasts.
no, you cannot accurately tell if a snake is venomous by its skin. the only way to accurately know if a snake if venomous is to look up the snakes native to your area and learn to recognize them. this way you can easily avoid the dangerous ones.
All snakes are cold blooded because they are reptiles.
depends on size of snake. take to pet store they will tell you.
That depends. Color alone does not determine the species of a snake. Some gray snakes, such as the gray rat snake, are harmless while others, such as some rattlesnakes, are highly venomous. If you cannot determine the species of snake then it is best to steer clear of it.
Take it to your vet and have them probe it.
They may, in that they prey on snakes as well as other reptiles, birds, small mammals, eggs, insects, etc. But they do not specifically prey on poisonous snakes. Typically people like it when they find out there is a king snake living near their house for this reason. They are also nice for rodent control.There are a large variety of snakes often called black snakes, but may have very different life histories--from pine snakes to the venomous cottonmouth moccasin. However, this addresses a whole different topic.
yes.No it's a ArachnidSonicfan is correct - scorpions are related to spiders - the have eight legs - insects only have six
No. The story of the snake in the Garden of Eden is a remnant of early animistic beliefs that are still to be found in indigenous beliefs, such as the Australian Dreamtime.Leon R. Kass (The Beginning of Wisdom: Reading Genesis) asks us to think of the snake allegorically and as an external embodiment of certain essentially human, rational capacities. The author used the snake to tell us about ourselves and our own human weaknesses.