Yes they sure can i have a 9 month year old python and he just stays in his little house and my boa she is 6 months and she just stays up in her tree. They get along. But you better not feed them at the same time. So just feed them separate and give them different water bowls. They should be fine together.
I hope you know your boa is going to get twice the size of your ball python and can carry diseases deadly to pythons. Not only that, they have completely different husbandry requirements. Ball pythons temps are 88-90 degrees on the hot side 75-80 degrees on the cool side and 50-60% humidity while boas have 90-95 degree hot side 85-90 degrees on the cool side and 70-80% humidity. One is going to get neglected or one is going to be in too extreme of conditions.
You should never house two different types of reptiles together. The only reason you could house together two of the same breed of snake together is for breeding purposes
Absolutely not. Snakes are solitary creatures by behaviour.
no
Mice/rats depending on the snake's size. It's the same diet as other ball pythons.
Same food as normal balls, about $5 a month.
It is possible, but you may consider this:1. Are you feeding your python too much? Once a month is sufficient.
They get the same size as a regular ball python, spider refers to their colour/pattern.
NO ! NEVER mix species together UNLESS they're found in the same environment naturally !
I wouldn't recommend it - the Reticulated python will eventually weigh more than twice that of the Burmese Python - and could theoretically crush it under the weight of the heavier snake.
you can't cross breed reptiles or amphibians. you might be able to cross breed color variants of the same species for example an albino bullfrog can breed with a regular bullfrog or a "standard" ball python can breed with a spider ball python i hope this helps
As far as i know (from being a snake owner) Ball Pythons do not actually build any type of home. They like to live in secluded places that give lots of shelter. In a snake cage you put a half log or upside down box for them to live in. Their shelter should be about as wide as they are when they coil into a ball. The same goes for in the wild. They will look for a hide place that is about the same size as they are.
The same way we do.
No, a Chameleon is a reptile. Some chameleon species give birth to live young,and the term for this is viviparous. However, they are not mammal because they do not produce milk for their young as all other mammals do.
A female ball python can get 5-6 ft long, the care is the same unless you breed. Although, you will need a bigger cage for a female due to their size.
a chameleon changes colors to camoflage and an iguana stays the same color