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.
they help control the rodent population. It is to like eat rats or anything like a predator so it can live and so there is not loads of them to over populate us.
almost anywhere but usually small damp and dark places
Contols the rodent population
the ecosystem of a snake is the forest
carnoviore
An ecosystem is a group of living and non-living things that are connected in a specific area. The living components of the ecosystem would be the animals, plants, and microscopic living creatures.
Ecosystem is a habitat where as community is a bunch of animals
unmanaged ecosystem is an ecosystem that nobody takes care of it.it is untouched ecosystem.
That's known as an ecosystem.
An ecosystem is a community of living organisms in conjunction with the nonliving components of their environment. Energy, water, nitrogen and soil minerals are other essential abiotic components of an ecosystem.
no
The snake minimizes the species and birth rate of rodents, insects, and some mammals that destroy our farm land. They are exterminators for our ecosystem!
Depends on the snake
Non-native Species
snakes live on the edge.
Dry conditions.. Maybe it water cause it can eat frogs..
All snakes have a place in the ecosystem, they eat other pests you don't want around.
An ecosystem is a group of living and non-living things that are connected in a specific area. The living components of the ecosystem would be the animals, plants, and microscopic living creatures.
You don't. You spend an extra 20 bucks buying a captive bred pet and not hurting your ecosystem.
The correct food chain is: plants --> birds --> snakes
Abiotic factors are the nonliving components of an ecosystem that affect the organisms living therein. Some abiotic factors that may affect a snake are: water supply and distribution, rate of precipitation, temperature patterns.
Lack of food, or overpopulation. If there are too many snakes, then not enough food will be evenly distributed, causing the snakes to die.