Premium Only Content

Close up view of wild snakes. 4K
There are more than 3,000 species of snakes on the planet and they’re found everywhere except in Antarctica, Iceland, Ireland, Greenland, and New Zealand. About 600 species are venomous, and only about 200—seven percent—are able to kill or significantly wound a human.
Nonvenomous snakes, which range from harmless garter snakes to the not-so-harmless python, dispatch their victims by swallowing them alive or constricting them to death. Whether they kill by striking with venom or squeezing, nearly all snakes eat their food whole, in sometimes astoundingly large portions.
Almost all snakes are covered in scales and as reptiles, they’re cold blooded and must regulate their body temperature externally. Scales serve several purposes: They trap moisture in arid climates and reduce friction as the snake moves. There have been several species of snakes discovered that are mostly scaleless, but even those have scales on their bellies.
How snakes hunt
How snakes hunt
Snakes also have forked tongues, which they flick in different directions to smell their surroundings. That lets them know when danger—or food—is nearby
Snakes have several other ways to detect a snack. Openings called pit holes in front of their eyes sense the heat given off by warm-blooded prey. And bones in their lower jaws pick up vibrations from rodents and other scurrying animals. When they do capture prey, snakes can eat animals up to three times bigger than their head is wide because their lower jaws unhinge from their upper jaws. Once in a snake’s mouth, the prey is held in place by teeth that face inward, trapping it there.
Habits
About once a month snakes shed their skin, a process called ecdysis that makes room for growth and gets rid of parasites. They rub against a tree branch or other object, then slither out of their skin head first, leaving it discarded inside-out.
Most snakes lay eggs, but some species—like sea snakes—give live birth to young. Very few snakes pay any attention to their eggs, with the exception of pythons, which incubate their eggs.
There are roughly a hundred snake species listed by the IUCN Red List as endangered, typically due to habitat loss from development.Here’s a fact to make ophidiophobes feel uneasy: Five species of snakes can fly.
-
LIVE
Jeff Ahern
1 hour agoFriday Freak out with Jeff Ahern
116 watching -
1:14:56
Lara Logan
13 hours agoTHE ONLYFANS SCAM: Victoria Sinis Breaks Down the Dangers and Lies Targeting Your Children | EP 40
37.5K6 -
3:02:51
Tundra Tactical
21 hours ago $0.28 earned{LIVE NOW} GunTuber Plays Battlefield 6...Terribly
11K3 -
40:50
The White House
3 hours agoPresident Trump Participates in a Bilateral Lunch with the President of Ukraine
23K23 -
54:57
Sean Unpaved
3 hours agoRodgers-Flacco TNF Showdown, CFB Week 8 Upsets, NFL Week 7 Edges, & Weekend Locks
26.9K -
2:05:45
The Culture War with Tim Pool
23 hours agoWokeness Is Dying, Conservatives Are Winning & Taking Back Entertainment | The Culture War Podcast
149K63 -
1:57:51
The Charlie Kirk Show
3 hours agoZelenskyy Gets to Know the King + Bolton Busted + NYC Showdown + AMA | Davis, McCoy | 10.17.2025
61.8K17 -
16:19
Neil McCoy-Ward
2 hours ago🚨 More Bank COLLAPSES Are On The Way... (AVOID These Banks!)
7.3K1 -
2:07:06
Side Scrollers Podcast
4 hours agoDiaper Furry Streamer Gets ONLY ONE DAY Suspension + Hasan PLAYS VICTIM + More | Side Scrollers
20.6K6 -
52:25
Steven Crowder
22 hours agoCAUGHT: Mamdani Campaign Admits Plans to Force NYPD to Defy ICE & Orchestrate Socialist Takeover
302K534