No part of a rattlesnake is poisonous, including the skin. However, they do produce a venom that is dangerous if injected but not if consumed.
No. The rattle is made up of skin. Each time the snake sheds, another rattle gets added to it.
No part of a rattlesnake is poisonous. However, the venom glands, venom ducts and fangs are the venomous parts of the rattlesnake.
A rattlesnake.
rattlesnake
There are no poisonous snakes in the Texas Panhandle. However, there are two species of venomous snakes - the prairie rattlesnake and the western diamondback rattlesnake.
They are poisonous, also called venomous.
The mongoose typically has three serrated claws that would slash at the predator normally. The rattlesnake's tough skin reduces the strength of the blow, preventing these claws from penetrating the inner sanctum of the rattlesnake's oral pectum. The rattlesnake could retaliate by using his poisonous fangs and the spotted rattlesnake venom could kill a mongoose with 0.246 of a drop.
It is mostly the rattlesnake.
The correct term is "venomous", and yes, all rattlers are.
A cobra and a rattlesnake are both snakes (of course) and they both are poisonous. But they both deliver the poison in different ways and the poison is not they exact same as far as chemistry goes.
No. The only venomous snakes in Missouri belong to the Pit Viper family. -Copperhead -Cottonmouth -Western Pygmy Rattlesnake -Massasauga Rattlesnake -Timber Rattlesnake
There are no specific poisonous snakes in Richmond, Indiana, but in Indiana, the Northern Copperhead (Agkistrodon contortrix mokasen), the Western Cottonmouth, otherwise known as the water moccasin (Agkistrodon piscivorus leucostoma), the Eastern Massasauga Rattlesnake (Sistrurus catenatus catenatus), and the Timber Rattlesnake (Crotalus horridus) are the snakes that are poisonous.