I would say no due to the size difference, though they do frequent similar habitats in a somewhat similar range.
African Rock pythons grow upwards of 12 feet. They should not be kept communally with ball pythons (which stay around 3-5 feet).
No sir, they are not. A snake like a Burmese python is giant. It can weigh up to 300 pounds (although lower 200's is more common). African Rock Pythons and Reticulated pythons are other examples of giant pythons.
No, but there is now a large population of pythons and African Rock pythons in the Keys. Thousands of pythons are now on the loose. People buy them and then let them loose so now they are breeding. NatGeo had a good program on this.
There is no such species as an american rock python. If there are rock pythons in america - they are either African rock pythons (Python sebae) or Burmese pythons (aka Asian rock python) (Python molurus) - which have been released into the wild by incompetent owners !
Philippine eagles have killed and ate burmese pythons and small reticulated pythons. Harpy eagles prey on tree pythons. Martial eagles hunt for small african rock pythons.
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yes
No, giraffes are herbivores.
The African Rock PYTHON is a constrictor, even though it may bite. The word Python meens a large constricting snake. Though not all pythons are large, like the Ball Python
That rather depends on which species you're asking about. Some species live less than ten years, while the larger pythons can live more than forty years. I have African Rock Pythons in my collection that were at least ten years old when I got them - and they've been with me more than twenty years now !
Lions and large leopolds hunt rock pythons
Lions and giraffes and chickens