No. There is no animal that can eat something bigger than itself. A king snake has a stomach and it has limits.
it has big jaws
In nature, king snakes can be a variety of colors, such as the all-black Mexican king snake and the black-and-white striped/banded king snake commonly found in america. In captivity, there are many more colors not found in nature. One variation, the Albino kingsnake, is very rare in the wild because a) the genetic combination necessary for this coloring is rare by itself and b) albino kingsnakes have poor vision and cannot camoflouge very well and are, therefore, killed by predators faster than the average kingsnake. The albino kingsnake is very common as a pet because of its beautiful coloring. I, myself, have an albino kingsnake, and they truly are beautiful!
no
Well it depends on how you look at it, a bite from a rattlesnake would obviously be alot more serious than that of a kingsnake bite, but if it were like a fight with the two whichever one is bigger would most likely be the one to win, the KINGsnake gets it name from being impervious to venom, therefore the kingsnake could consume the rattlesnake without harm.
A fish
yes
The grass snake is pretty small but the smallest snake in the world is the thread snake it is no bigger than a quarter.
because the California king snake is bigger than the rattle snake so it can just gulp it down.
yes, much larger
African Rock Python Amazon Tree Boa Aesculapian Asp Anaconda Andean Milk Snake Arizona Mountain Kingsnake Asian Rat Snake Adder
anything bigger than the cricket itself
only if there very hungrey This is not true. Corn snakes are far from cannibalistic, unlike king snakes. If the cage is too small however, they will become stressed. Stress also stems from the snakes being very different in size.