Most predators who mainly depend on the rabbits minerals, fibers, and meat would be extinct. Lots of carnivores mainly eat the rabbit.
most likely there would be an over population of snakes, but after all those snakes eat whatever they eat, they would die because there would be no more food for them since they ate it all.
The native predators of the squirrel glider are owls, kookaburras and snakes. Quolls also prey on squirrel gliders. Since the time European settlement began in Australia, enemies of the squirrel glider have increased to include instroduced foxes, cats and dogs. People are a threat as they cut down the gliders' habitat.
The rodent population would swiftly diminish !
Predation. The increased snake population requires an increased amount of food. The frog population could act as the food source for the increasing snake population thus reducing the frog population. - Dr. R. J. L.
Many desert predators would eat a squirrel, including hawks and coyotes and snakes.
Yes because the population increased in 1999.
There would become an over population of small rodents and insects
Any food chain or food web that included snakes would be affected. The animals which the snakes preyed upon would no longer have that population control and could overrun their niche.
Snakes and birds, as well as large fish, badgers, etc.
Tortoises are probably about as closely related to snakes as you are to a squirrel. :) They are both reptiles (just as you and a squirrel are both mammals), but tortoises are a very old kind of reptile, and snakes are the newest kind of reptile. Snakes are more closely related to lizards--but still not all that closely related.
No not at all. The squirrel is a mammal, reptiles do nothave fur but scales. Reptiles are animals like snakes, lizards, tortoises, turtles, crocodiles & alligators.
People, cats, foxes. raccoons, hawks, dogs, snakes, bears, coyotes, cougars, owls...
Many squirrel species, bugs, and maybe snakes or bears depending on location.