Corn snakes are found in the eastern United States from southern New Jersey south through Florida, west into Louisiana and parts of Kentucky. Corn snakes may be found in wooded groves, rocky hillsides, woodlots, barns and abandoned buildings.
Corn Snakes (elaphe Gutta) are a spieces of Rat Snake, which are found wild in central America and are found down as far as Florida. There are approx a 100 different types of Rat snake in the world and the Corn Snake is probably the most gentle one to have as a pet. They get their name from that fact that the underside of the snake has a pattern that looks like Indian corn. Not just because they`re found in corn fields as is often stated.
If you returned a pet corn snake to it's natural habitat - yes - it would survive.
yes they can
Yes, they are native to north america.
In captivity, a corn snake will eat mice or rats. In the wild, a corn snake will eat anything it can find, such as birds, lizards, bats, or frogs.
No , Corn snakes are not native to Rhode Island as far as I know. Another colorful snake that mildly resembles the corn snake is the Milk snake...which is native to Rhode Island
Corn Snake does not have any Bengali Name, since the snake is only found in southeastern USA, it is not known to this part of the world.
No the corn snake and the grass snake are completely different species ! Corn snakes are a native species of North America, while grass snakes are primarily found in Europe - including the British Isles.
It's probably a red rat (or corn) snake
We feed this wild chicken we found corn after we ate the corn of the cob it pecks at it and eats the indside
maybe in the wild but if your pet corns are showing aggression to each other you should separate them immediately make sure you have a spare space for the other
Not necessarily. The term chicken snake can refer to several species of snake. The corn snake is one of them.