I wouldn't recommend it. Pythons are 'heavy-bodied' reptiles - and adults weigh considerably more than the babies. There is a chance of the little one being crushed under the weight of the adult.
You should feed your baby ball python frozen pinkies, your middle-aged python frozen mice, your aged python, live mice!
well ball python can be feed once a week .
A ball Python is an animal that eats things that are smaller than they are. I would NOT, I repeat NOT put the python and a baby together. Pythons are heavy and can constrict very quickly. Never let your python get around anything you don't want suffocated, crushed, or eaten. Especially children.
No your snake will eat them unless it is a baby snake.
A white ball python could be any of the white pythons. Those are the Blue-Eyed Leucistic Ball Python, Ivory Ball Python, Hypo Ivory Ball Python and the Piebald Ball Python.
"ball pythons in general should not be housed together. ..unless breeding. one will dominate the other and one will suffer " Ball Pythons, as with most other snakes.. should not be housed together at all. Even a mother should be separated from her babies as soon as you can. Snakes are very dominant and will fight for food if there is competition, which is what having two snakes in the same tank would create. If you are planning to breed your snakes, They are not mature enough to begin breeding until about 3 years of age and they should be slowly introduced to each other to avoid fighting.
None. Ball python is the species. There are currently no recognized subspecies of ball python, either.
yes one is nice but not several bunched together.
no, dont even try
The ball python is only one type of Python. As I don't know which other type of python you're asking me to compare the ball python with I can't really answer your question...
Yes.
You may be refering to the term "Ball Snake" which is a popular term for a Python Regius (Royal Python) also known as a "Ball Python".