It all depends on if they are on land or in water. I guess it might be a fight if they were in like a shallow body of water where they both can move and fight. I feel like the fight would end in mutual destruction either way.
stag beetle
Simba.
Obvioussally a bull ant uhhh
Venom is stronger and faster but Batman is smarter but Venom would kill Batman by his webs.
The eastern diamondback is larger than the timber rattlesnake, and they would probably ignore each other in the wild.
It would produce a rarely seen variety called a timberback.
Two of New Jersey's snake species are venomous, the timber rattlesnake and the northern copperhead. The timber rattlesnake would be the worst as far as the venom.
The fisher would probably win such a battle.
Pack of Timber Wolves will surely win the fight
i would say the tiger, because it could jus like step on the rattlesnake nd then the rattlesnake would be dead, but then again, the rattlesnake could like bite the tiger nd inject venom, nd then the tiger is doomed.
Many different types of Rattlesnakes reside in the U.S, but the most common would be the Eastern Diamondback, Western Diamondback, Mojave Rattlesnake, Timber Rattlesnake, and the Spectecled Rattlesnake. Other Species include Cottonmouth, Sidewinders and 3 types of Coral Snakes.
The timber rattlesnake, Crotalus Horridus, is found over much of the Midwest and eastern United States, in two subspecies. The canebrake rattlesnake, a paler southern race, is found in the deep south, inhabits lower regions than the nominate race.
The timber wolves.
A rattlesnake is located in the southwest of the US and a lion is found in Africa, so they would never meet. This makes this question without purpose or speculation.
Yes, it would, but the rattlesnake has poison.
Very rare but they do exist, mostly in the southwestern part of the state, but have been seen elsewhere. Don't believe anything the state of Maine says about wildlife, they don't have enough budget to have a clue.