It lies in wait under a bush or burrows itself into the sand with only the top of the head exposed and waits for prey to come to it.
Flora are plants and Fauna are animals so a sidewinder rattlesnake would be a Fauna.
Crotalus cerastes
shelter of the side wider rattlesnake
31 pounds
No, sidewinders are a type of rattlesnake. The wolf is a mammal.
The tiger rattlesnake is a snake. It begins with the letter t.
No, almost any snake will move with a side-winding motion when on loose, hot sand. The sidewinder rattlesnake has perfected the movement. There is also a viper or two in Africa that has no rattles but uses the side-winding motion. The horned viper is a good example.
the sidewinder (Crotalus cerastes),speckled rattlesnake (C. mitchellii), Mojave rattlesnake, western rattlesnake (C. viridis), Hopi Rattlesnake, Midget Faced Rattlesnake, and Great Basin Rattlesnake
Most snakes will use a sidewinding motion when moving in loose sand. The sidewinder rattlesnake has perfected the movement.
Crotalus Horridus Horridus and Crotalus Horridus Atricaudatus for the southern "canebrake" race.
The Sidewinder (Crotalus cerastes) is small compared to a lot of other Rattlesnake species. Usually about 2ft long.
Like all snakes, they live on their own.