English, asked by kushagrakhetan3e, 1 year ago

where does the snake start moving to avoid being killed?

Answers

Answered by sandy375
1
A snake’s body will randomly twitch as the dying nerves fire off. Disturbingly, so would yours. Reptile bodies just tend to go on a bit longer, because they’re more efficient and don’t need as much oxygen, so the dying process takes longer. But of course a snake’s severed body doesn’t make attacking motions - it has no brain. It doesn’t have any means to detect that it’s being handled. It’s all just random nerve firings - convulsions.

Much more disturbingly, the snake’s head reacts because the poor animal is still alive. Refer back to what I said about reptilian metabolism - much less oxygen is needed to keep a reptile alive, so it takes the snake’s brain a very long time to die. What a horrific and agonizing death - never do this to a snake.

hope its help you

kushagrakhetan3e: i asked it from the chapter snake trying in class 9
Answered by Anonymous
3

A snake’s body will randomly twitch as the dying nerves fire off. Disturbingly, so would yours. Reptile bodies just tend to go on a bit longer, because they’re more efficient and don’t need as much oxygen, so the dying process takes longer. But of course a snake’s severed body doesn’t make attacking motions - it has no brain. It doesn’t have any means to detect that it’s being handled. It’s all just random nerve firings - convulsions.

Much more disturbingly, the snake’s head reacts because the poor animal is still alive. Refer back to what I said about reptilian metabolism - much less oxygen is needed to keep a reptile alive, so it takes the snake’s brain a very long time to die. What a horrific and agonizing death - never do this to a snake.


kushagrakhetan3e: it did not help me
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