It's a 'direction finding tool'. Each half of the tongue is independent from the other. When scent particles from the air stick to the tongue, they are detected by the Jacobson's organ. If the strength of the scent is stronger on one side, the snake knows to go in that direction.
Snakes only have one tongue it may look like they have two as their tongues are forked. The tongue splits at the end making it appear it has two tongues.
While a snake's forked tongue looks dangerous, it really is not. Snakes actually smell with their tongues. If snakes bite, they use their teeth
They use their tongues, with which they pick up particles and leave them to a special organ called vomeronasal organ.
A tortoise certainly can because I have seen my neighbours tortoise do this (a little way) when eating a tomato. Regarding turtles, although I have hand fed a wild turtle while diving in the ocean, I have not seen a turtle do this - (However, this does not mean that they can't).
Snakes are elongated, legless reptiles that are cold-blooded and covered in scales. They use their forked tongues to gather scent particles, and most species are carnivorous, feeding on a variety of prey including rodents, birds, and insects. Some snakes are venomous and use venom to subdue their prey, while others constrict their prey with their bodies.
Yes because it's still a snake, joined twins still have a Tounge because they are joined.
Yes, But most snakes use their nose for smelling; some snakes use their forked tongues
Snakes only have one tongue it may look like they have two as their tongues are forked. The tongue splits at the end making it appear it has two tongues.
most snakes cant see very well or not at all with their eyes. They rely on their forked tongues to smell and sense things
While a snake's forked tongue looks dangerous, it really is not. Snakes actually smell with their tongues. If snakes bite, they use their teeth
Snakes use there tongues for a lot of thing. Snakes use their tongues for smell and to find food.
One forked tongue is one of the snakes by the dinosaur and the other is one of the blue monsters snakes tongue.
Yes they do
It's forked tongue.
Snakes have long tongues because that is how they smell and see. They use the tongue as one of their senses; that is why it is always going in and out of their mouth.
A snake has a forked tongue because it evolved as a 'direction finding' sense over thousands of years. As a snake flicks its tongue, microscopic particles of scent stick to it. The tongue is pulled back into the mouth, and placed into the Jacobson's Organ - an area of very sensitive nerve cells. So sensitive that it can detect the microscopic variations from one half of the forked tongue to the other - telling the snake to 'go this way' to food !
No, snakes do though! =)