there is a garter snake in my yard giving birth and i am gonna keep some and i have a 20 gallon tank
Garter snakes can range from 1' to 4' depending on species and sex.
Depending on the size of the meal, they will eat every other day to every 3 days. Baby garter snakes eat small worms, fish, slugs,Wieners,babies, leeches, and tadpoles. Garter snakes have a higher metabolism than most snakes, and because of this, and their diet, they need to eat more often than most species.
Yes. Cats will go after just about any prey that is the right size. This includes small snakes.
yes...usually medium well...with a nice glass of gewurztraminer...
That depends on the species. A baby garter or ribbon snake may eat a moth with the wings removed (obviously, they won't catch it if it's flying out-of-reach). On the other hand, a baby ball python or boa constrictor will be eating something the size of a baby mouse as soon as they've hatched.
It sort of depends on the size, age and coloration ! Baby 'standard' corn snakes sell for around £60 but an albino would be more expensive.
There's quite a few species under 6 feet long that make reasonable 'pets'. Garter snakes rarely exceed 3 feet. Corn snakes average around 5 feet in length. Even Royal Pythons are shorter than 6 feet at adult size (although in any species there areexceptions !)
Absolutely not ! A garter snake would never grow to the size necessary to be able to consume a wolf !
There are 2 ways to answer this:No, frogs do not eat reptiles by constricting them first. A bullfrog will simply swallow the live reptile whole.Yes, garter snakes will eat frogs but, frogs are not reptiles.
pretty much it just eats, sleeps, and shreds it's skin from time to time. Animals that snakes eat includes- mice rabbits baby deer baby deer? snakes have massive mouths which can stretch to atleast a meter in height; and then it moulds make to it's original size :)
The size of the mother's pelvis, the size of the baby, and the type of breech position the baby is in.
It depends on the species - and the size of the new-born. Most of the commonly-kept species (such as corn snakes or king snakes) will feed on 'pinkie' mice (new-born baby mice). Gradually increasing the size of the 'food' as they get older.