The underside of a copperhead snake is typically light-colored, ranging from cream to yellowish, often with darker, irregularly shaped blotches or spots. This coloration provides camouflage against the forest floor and helps it blend in with its surroundings. The belly scales are smooth and shiny, contributing to its distinctive appearance. Overall, the underside contrasts with the more patterned, brownish tones of its dorsal side.
They don't look like anything, copperheads are pit vipers which give live birth
The ones I've seen look like the underside of a hamster -- nothing remarkable.
nearly a circle but all depending on the foot print
Male and female hedgehogs look very similar. However, if you look on the underside of the male, his penis is in the middle of his underside and looks like a small belly button. The female does not have that.
On the top, they are black and white. On the underside, they are Brown. Their oar-like legs are brown.
a bib is a little white bit on the underside of their nose, it looks almost like teeth
I found it on YouTube, so I would look there.
No a copperhead snake does not rattle.
NCWRC has pictures you can look for. Venomous snakes of NC are: Northern Copperhead Southern Copperhead Timber Rattlesnake Pygmy Rattlesnake Esatern diamondback rattlesnake Eastern coral snake Cottonmouth
Weevil eggs can be white or yellow and shaped like a tiny ball or jellybean. They are very small and shiny, and are generally found on the underside of grasses and leaves.
Mosses (and ferns, too) reproduce by forming spores. Spores look like little black dots on the underside of a fern's leaf. I do not know what they look like on mosses.
Copperhead Road is in Johnson County, Tennessee.