Australasian Tiger Snakes of the genus Notechis produce about 30 young on average, but on occasion births can be as low as 10 or as high as 64(the known record). Unlike most snakes of the family Elapidae such as cobras and mambas, the Tiger Snake gives birth to live young rather than laying eggs.
There are many snakes that live in the Australian desert. The Red-Bellied Black Snake, New South Wales Tiger snake, Western Tiger snake, Chappell Island Tiger snake, King Island Tiger Snake, and the Tasmanian Tiger snake are just a few.
its a banded form of a brown tree snake boiga irregularis I came across your question as I was trying to find out. I saw them mentioned on aussiepythons.com . That's where I ended up finding the answer.
It is unknown how many snakes altogether Tasmania has. What is known is that Tasmania has just three species of land snakes:Tasmanian Tiger Snake or Black TigerAustralian CopperheadWhite-lipped Whip SnakeThe first two are venomous. The Whip snake has low levels of toxicity, and no human deaths have been reported as a result of being bitten by a White-lipped Whip Snake.
There are many types of venemous snakes. Ten are: The Eastern Diamondback, the Death Adder, the Philippine Cobra, the Tiger Snake, the Black Mamba, the Taipan, the Blue Krait, the Eastern Brown Snake, the Indian Taipan, and Belcher's Sea Snake (the most venomous of them all).
A pacific rattler can have 4 to 25 eggs in which an average of 7 to 10 live. :(
200
It depends on what species of snake and the location of the snake. Many snakes will eat other snakes, other common predators of snakes include birds and foxes.
It depends on the type of snake. It can be anywhere from two to two hundred, and this is not a strict rule by any means.
There are no poisonous snakes in Australia but there are many venomous ones.There is a difference between being poisonous and being venomous. The difference is how the toxin is delivered.Animals which are venomous inject the venom into their victims by a spur or stinger of some sort, just as some snakes inject their victims with venom via their fangs.Animals (or plants) which are poisonous do not deliver their toxins directly. The body of the animal (or plant) tends to contain the poisonous substance within it, and they only cause harm to other organisms when they are eaten or touched.Whilst there are around 100 species of venomous snakes in Australia, only a dozen of them have a deadly bite.Australia's most venomous snakes include:Taipan (including Inland Taipan and Coastal Taipan)Eastern BrownRed Bellied Black snakeTiger (including Black Tiger and eastern Tiger)CopperheadGwardarCollett'sDeath AdderMulga Snake or King Brown
that answer is not answered.
99 4" snakes equals a 33' snake
The Anaconda (eunectes murinus). There are many snakes that could be found in the wetlands, such as nothern water snake, cottonmouth, diamondback water snake, garter snakes.