Skip to content

Why do rattlesnakes rattle?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: Warning predators to stay away

Warning predators to stay awayCorrect! Acoustic warning signal! Rattlesnake tail rattle: interlocking keratin segments (hollow). Shaking: 50+ times/second creates buzzing sound. Function: aposematism—warning potential threats before strike. Saves venom (metabolically expensive to produce). New rattle segment added with each shed (not age indicator—varies by shedding frequency). Loud rattle: can be heard 30m away. Defensive, not aggressive—snake prefers escape. Juvenile rattlesnakes: silent (no rattle yet) but still venomous—more dangerous!

Digesting food while movingWrong. Rattling has nothing to do with digestion—snakes digest by staying still, not moving. The rattle is purely an acoustic warning signal to threats.

Shaking off old skinWrong. Rattling doesn't remove skin. It's acoustic warning—rapid tail shaking of keratin segments alerts threats before striking.

🚀 Play today's quiz — new questions daily

More Animal Behavior questions