No. No python is venomous.
Burmese pythons currently are living in Florida and are becoming an invasive species.
No. Burmese pythons are not venomous. They strangle their prey and have no use for venom or poison.
well it depends. females grow about 5 feet and males grow about 4 feet.
No, the Burmese Python is not poisonous: it bites on to its prey with back-facing teeth, then wraps its body around the victim until it dies from suffocation, it is then swallowed whole. Pythons (Burmese and otherwise) are constrictors ... like most snakes, they are descended from a venomous ancestor and still have toxin-producing glands, but the toxins in pythons are relatively weak and the snake doesn't produce enough of them to matter much.
Nope - Burmese Pythons are constrictors. The do not possess venom glands.
it depends on the specific snake. they can bekhaki-coloured (green)"labyrinth" which have maze-like patterns"leucistic" pythons are white with black eyes thus preventing it from being truly albino
Burmese Pythons, like all Pythons, hatch from eggs. Boas do not lay eggs
burmese pythons' come from Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam
Could be any one of a number of species - including Boa constrictors, Burmese Pythons, Reticulated Pythons or Anacondas
Burmese Pythons are native to the Asian continent - around Burma (hence the name) and India.
Burmese pythons are constrictors meaning they strangle their prey to death, and the consume them whole.
Saltwater crocodiles are common predators of burmese pythons. Komodo dragons also prey on burms.