some do eg. rats and mice and other small like animals(also the otter) but mostly birds eat them, ive heard hedghogs do to!
Some rodents are omniverous, meaning they eat both plants and animals. Rats, for example, will eat eggs or small insects, in addition to eating plant-based food.
No! they are herbavores
nope it's the other way around i think.
no
Rattlesnakes eat a variety of rodents, such as mice and rats. The width of the rodent should be equal to the width at the widest part of the snake.
Pit vipers - like the vast majority of snake species - are rodent eaters. They prey on animals such as rats, mice, voles etc.
That depends entirely on the species of snake! Some snakes, such as garter snakes, may eat small meals every other day. Most snakes that eat rodents eat about once a week, and eat a rodent that is about as big around as they are at their widest point.
Some reptiles do. For an example, a snake could eat a rat or a mouse, but also, animals eat rodents. Owls eat hamsters, gerbils, and guinea pigs. Rats eat mice. Etc.
Well, farmers hate mice. Also pythons love to eat them. This is why farmers are greatful of pythons because these snake eat the mice/rodent. I hope I was most helpful.
A basic food chain, Chipmonk eats plant, and snake its chipmonk, therefore getting some of the plants nutrients. In greater detail, the Plant is the producer, the chipmonk the primary consumer and the snake would be a secondary consumer. The chipmonk has used the plant matter to grow and live therefore it has supplied all of the energy, nutrients and tissues in the rodent.
stuff
Where the energy goes to, in other words, what is doing the eating. For example if the arrow is pointing from a rodent to a snake, the energy from the rodent is going to the snake (when it eats the rodent).
a gopher snake uses an abandoned rodent hole
A rodent (mouse or rat) of appropriate size (width of rodent should be 1-1.5x the width of the widest part of the snake) Can be fed pre-killed or live but pre-killed is the suggested method, especially frozen and then rethawed to ensure that any parasites the rodent may have had are killed off and not passed onto the boa.
The snake is a carnivore, a second-level or third-level consumer of smaller animals, including reptiles, amphibians, and mammals (mostly rodents). Some snakes control rodent pests, while others have a diet of mostly amphibians (frogs, toads) and bird eggs.