red and yellow kill a fellow red and black venom lack
The snake you are referring to is likely the coral snake, a venomous snake found in North and South America. It is known for its distinct red, yellow, and black rings. Remember, "Red on yellow, kill a fellow; red on black, venom lack."
If you mean the order of the coloured bands - it's red, yellow, black.
Coral snakes are relatively small snakes. They are tri-colors - yellow, red and black. The coral snake distinguishes itself from copycats, such as the king snake, by the coloration of the stripes. If the yellow stripes touch the red stripes the snake is a coral snake.
The phrase is "Red touches yellow - kill a fellow. Red touches black - venom lack." The coral snake's bands are arranged in the order red, yellow, black, yellow. The king snake's coloured bands are in the order red, black, yellow, black.
"Red touching black is a friend of Jack, red touching yellow can kill a fellow." This refers to the red, black and yellow rings around the coral snake. If the yellow and red rings are touching, you have a coral snake. If the red and black rings are touching, you probably have one of 25 subspecies of the king snakes.
its to do with snakes,,, if the patern red touch yellow they are usually poisones,, if red touches black , they are usually non poison,,,
A Coral snake - a highly venomous species - has hoops of red, yellow and black arranged along the length of it body in the order red-yellow-black-yellow.
Referring to the coloured bands... Red touches yellow - kill a fellow. Red touches black - venom lack. The order of the bands on a Coral snake is red, yellow, black, yellow. With the harmless king snake it's red, black, yellow, black.
well it means that if you see a snake that is in a pattern of red and yellow means its deadly and its dangerous so you should stay away from it.Thank you and i hope this helped you!!!!!
Assuming you meant 'Coral' snake - there are a few rhymes around to help you remember how to distinguish one from a banded king snake... Red touches yellow, kill a fellow - Red touches black, venom lack - is one example. With a king snake, the bands are in the order Red-black-yellow-black (this repeats along the length of the body) - while in coral snakes the order is red-yellow-black yellow
If the stripes are light in color, maybe even off white it could be a CA king snake.
The snake you are referring to is likely the Coral Snake. Coral snakes have distinctive black, yellow, and red bands that encircle their bodies. They are known for their venomous bite and should be avoided in the wild.