Spilled grain and seeds attracts rodents. Rodents attract their predators, which may include snakes.
There are no toilets made out of vermin's or any other type of animal or insect. You can get vermin's in your toilet though like rats and snakes.
no it wont like <><><> No- snakes are carnivores- meat eaters. But they will hang around bird feeders- trying to get a bird- not birdseed.
Snakes prey on mice and other vermin. If all snakes were removed from a field, the vermin population would probably increase dramatically and the mice and insects would destroy more of the vegetation growing in the field.
Outside its native country (North America), the grey squirrel is most certainly a pest and is classified by law as vermin.
To keep rats and other vermin inside the bowl .. some palces snakes come up through the toilet trap
Coyotes do eat snakes as well as a number of other animals. They are opportunistic feeders.
Scrap tires harbor mosquitoes, snakes and other vermin. West Nile virus, transmitted by mosquitoes, is a serious health threat.
They are popular as pets, as they are relatively docile as snakes go - but you can go broke feeding them. They are better off in the wild where they perform a valubale function as predators of vermin that attack grain bins and other stored crops.
No Finches will gather with other birds at feeders and the feeder can be placed with other species specific feeders.
No toads don't eat snail shells in fact it's quite bad for them.
No, vermin means harmful to others, while cannibal means to eat other humans.
This depends on what kind of birdfeeder you have and what you put in it. Seed-eating birds will come to a birdfeeder with...well, seed, obviously. These will vary depending on the kind of seed, and will include sparrows, finches, goldfinches, doves, nuthatches, and chickadees. Suet feeders will attract a variety - most of the birds mentioned will eat from them, and so will woodpeckers, sapsuckers, and bushtits. Peanut and other nut feeders will attract crows, ravens, and jays. Fruit will attract finches, robins and other thrushes, bluebirds, and waxwings. Sugar water will attract hummingbirds and orioles, and the occasional woodpecker or finch. And then there are the more omnivorous birds (such as the invasive European Starling) which will chow down pretty much anything you put out.