as much as a monster energy would be
hg
it would be 20 calories = 10%
I got mine for about 250 with shipping
It depends on what type of snake you have.
No. All snakes are carnivores. Snakes provide a great illustration of food chains-a plant uses the energy from sunlight to grow, sustain itself and make seeds; a mouse eats the seeds; a snake eats the mouse.
When you eat something you only get 10% of the original energy that was in the thing that you ate eating it does not take that much energy so I would say that you would get about 10% of the energy the anmial had
15
15
15
it would be 20 calories = 10%
I got mine for about 250 with shipping
Energy can be created by eating the right choice of foods, not eating too much, and not eating too little.
Many corn snakes will take a frozen-thawed or pre-killed rodent from tongs on the first try if you simply wiggle it in front of them slightly to make it look alive. If your snake is very afraid of you, try leaving the pre-killed prey with it in the dark at night, and see if it's gone in the morning. If your corn snake is stubborn, start by offering it LIVE prey from tongs. Get the snake used to eating that way. THEN try FRESHLY killed prey, moved to make it look alive--be sure not to move it too much, which may alarm the snake--just as much as a live mouse would move. Once your snake will take fresh pre-killed prey, then you can offer a frozen/thawed mouse. Be sure the mouse is completely thawed, and slightly warm. If the snake is unimpressed, rub the thawed mouse is soiled mouse bedding to pick up the scent, and try again. If the snake refuses prey offered one way, give up and offer it food the way it likes (if it will eat pre-killed, but not f/t, then give it the pre-killed again, and try the f/t again next time). Snakes don't experience hunger exactly the same way we do, and they are adapted to going long periods without food. A snake's hunger strike CAN last until it dies of starvation. It's more effective to get your snake used to being fed on the same day every single week--and feed it new things THEN, or no more than one day later than the usual day. If you keep trying, in the order above--eventually, you will have your snake eating frozen/thawed rodents without a problem. Corn snakes are generally very easy to switch over to eating dead food.
No, most captive king snakes quickly learn to take pre-killed rodents. In fact, it is much safer to do this. If a live mouse is introduced into the cage and the snake has no interest in feeding at the time, the mouse can do serious damage to the snake, even kill it.
depends how feisty they are in the morning.
About $2.50 for a bag of three frozen mice to thaw out or $1.50ish for on live mouse. But it is a better idea to feed dead mice. Otherwise u chance the mouse attacking the snake and a long term injury of stiching the snake up since reptiles heal slow. So dead mice save u more money potentially
It's possible for mice to injure snacks, and that might include nibbling away at them. There's been many cases of irresponsible keepers giving a small snake too large of a mouse and the mouse injuring the snake as a result. That's why dead rodents are much safer to feed to snakes. If the snake is finicky and refuses to eat pre-dead food (which does happen) then they should be supervised during feedings and small prey should be given. When using live feed, many snake keepers prefer to knock the feed animal unconscious before putting it into the enclosure.
Depending on the type of snake baby snakes should eat about 10 to 15 crickets but I do not recommend this I would much rather you buy a baby mouse and drop it in the tank with your snake and you should do this once a week. And try to do it on the same day each week