A snake.
"Snake Milk" is a term which refers to the droplets of venom one obtains by "milking" a snake. It is often used for scientific study and the making of anti-venom.
Answer Depending on the order of the stripes and the area where you live it is either a coral snake or a type of milk snake. I have just googled this because of a snake on a TV advert (in the UK). I reckon it could easily be a corn snake. They aren't actually stripes, but really look like stripes.
Sea Kraits are white with black stripes. Or black with white stripes if you like to look at it that way.They're a sea snake, highly venomous, but only aggressive when provoked repeatedly.King snakes are also black and white, striped. They are non-venomous, land based and eat other snakes.Hope this helped!
i think its a milk snake im not to sure though
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.
No they aren't vicious, they can be nervous at first but will quickly get used to you and just hang out, I have a sinaloan milk snake and couldn't get him to bite me if I wanted to
* The rare Paradise Flying Snake * The Sinaloan Milk Snake * The Central Plains Milk Snake * The Scarlet King Snake * The Long-Nosed Snake * The San Francisco Garter Snake * The Western & South American Coralsnake
A pet snake is a snake that has been raised in captivity or with people around it all the time so when it is at least a year old they can transport it to a pet shop and then you can can buy it legally and keep it as a pet. Some snakes available to keep as pets are 1. Black Indigo Snake. 2. A Garter Snake. 3. The Sinaloan Milk Snake. 4. An Eastern Hognose Snake. 5. The Leopard Rat Snake. 6. The Speckled Kingsnake 7. and a Royal Python aka the longest snake you can keep as a pet.
The milk snake is a prime example of mimicry. Many predators will recognize the colorful bands of a coral snake and leave it be to avoid its deadly bite. The non-venomous milk snake mimics the coral snake's banding, so predators will mistake it for a coral snake and not attack it.
"Snake Milk" is a term which refers to the droplets of venom one obtains by "milking" a snake. It is often used for scientific study and the making of anti-venom.
a milk snake
no milk is not good for snakes
when you put water inside milk, the milk will look like what it did without water.
Yes a yeast infection can look like milk.
they like their habitat because i should be close to their natural habitat
The harmless milk snake mimics the colored banding of the venomous coral snake so predators will avoid it.
A milk snake will bite its prey and wrap around it with constricting coils.