On the bottom the producer would be grass. Then connected to it would be trout, deer, mouse, and grasshopper. The wolf would eat the deer, but nothing eats the wolf. The frog and trout could eat the grasshopper. Raccoon eats the frog, the grasshopper and the trout. Snake eat frog and mouse. Depending on the snakes size and type, it could eat the raccoon or the raccoon could eat it. Hope that answers your Question!:)
corn is at the bottom which is the producer, then the mouse and cricket eat the corn, cat and snake eat the mouse, blubird eats the cricket, and the hawk is at the top of the foodchain and the hawk eats the bluebird, snake, and the cat
Panther eats deer, deer eats shrub, grass, and a tree. An owl and a hawk eats a mouse and a rabbit, a mouse and a rabbit eats grass. A hawk and an owl also eats a frog, frog eats a cricket, a cricket eats grass. A hawk and and an owl also eat a snake, a snake eats a frog, a mouse, and a rabbit.
that questionis very simple and my answer was research on the internet
the gray banded king snake or corn snake
Nope - they are completely different species !... In fact - the king snake would view the corn snake as food !
If you returned a pet corn snake to it's natural habitat - yes - it would survive.
Not necessarily. The term chicken snake can refer to several species of snake. The corn snake is one of them.
medium corn snake:sub adult , adult corn snake:adult
In its natural environment - the three relationships a corn snake would have are :- With its food, with other native animal species, and with man !
yes a hatchling corn snake can go in a vivarium with an adult corn snake but only if the adult corn is very tame and feed well and there needs to be lots of hiding places for the hatchling corn snake to hide about 5 hides
No - they are completely separate species and would never inter-breed !
I wouldn't try that if I were you. The snake would try to kill and eat the frog.