They have venom but such a little amount it is harmless to humans and preaty much everything else other then a toad.
No, there are no venomous Milk Snakes.
No, milk snakes are not venomous. They are non-venomous reptiles and are harmless to humans. Their name comes from the myth that they would suck the milk from cows, but they actually feed on small rodents and insects.
The scientific name for the Mexican Milk Snake is Lampropeltis triangulum annulata.
The harmless milk snake mimics the colored banding of the venomous coral snake so predators will avoid it.
All snake-bites are painful - even non-venomous ones. However - the pain usually subsides fairly quickly - unless you've been bitten by a venomous species (which the king snake is not).
firstly, the correct term is venomous, and no, none of the king or milk snake species are venomous
The first snake that came to mind when I read the question was... Mamba.
The Coral snake and Mexican Milk snake are similar because of their colors, they both have three colors: Red, Black, and yellow.Coral snakes are preety dangerous so some Mexican Milk Snakes are killed for confustion of being a coral snake.The only way I can think of to tell the to species apart is "red and black friend of jack but red and yellow could kill a fellow"
the desert cobra. (Highly venomous not to be played around with) a cool snake is a coral snake and gets mixed up with a milk snake. this is a riddle to tell the difference: if red touches yellow your a safe fellow, if red touches black your dead jack. coral snakes are aggressive and venomous milk snakes are harmless. Thank You
Nope - milk snakes are a harmless species. They are constrictors.
The Chihuahuan Desert
The milk snake is colored similarly to the highly venomous coral snake. This wards away potential attackers, believing the harmless milk snake to be the poisonous coral snake. To discern the difference between the two (a life or death situation), one must simply remember this rhyme: "Red on yellow, deadly fellow; red on black, venom lack."