There are five types of Copperhead snakes, two of which are found in North America.
Another is found in southern Australia and Tasmania.
Another is found in southern Asia.
The fifth type is found in southest Asia.
See the related links section to see a picture of a copperhead snake.
A copperhead snake is venomous.
Its head is colored like copper (the metal they use for pennies and water pipes in homes), and the body of the snake is a different color.
No, a copperhead snake and black rat snake cannot breed because they are two different species within the snake family. Cross-breeding between different species is not possible due to genetic differences.
If a black snake bites a copperhead, it would likely inject venom into the copperhead. This may cause harm or even death to the copperhead, depending on the amount of venom injected and the sensitivity of the copperhead to the venom. However, the outcome can vary depending on the specific circumstances.
The Copperhead (Agkistrodon contortrix) is a native reptile of North America. See related link to Wikipedia for more information.
Arizona
No a copperhead snake does not rattle.
Osage copperhead is a snake. It begins with O.
Snake Wranglers - 2002 Copperhead Cannibals was released on: USA: 2004
They are a native species of North america.
See the related links section to see a picture of a copperhead snake.
Native black racers have no venom: poison. The only poisonous native snakes in the US are the various rattlesnakes, the cottonmouth, the copperhead, and the little coral snake.
No. It's a snake. Yes. It's a fish. A confusing answer, but the copperhead is most commonly seen as the snake, such as that which is pictured in the above image. However, there is also a species of bluegill with the name copperhead.
A copperhead snake is venomous.
it kills it
Native black racers have no venom: poison. The only poisonous native snakes in the US are the various rattlesnakes, the cottonmouth, the copperhead, and the little coral snake.