a milk snake
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
No because if you feed a Corn Snake live mice then it can also put up a fight.Which gives the mouse an opportunity to hurt your snake.So you should probaly feed your snake frozen dead mice.
A corn snake can typically swallow a mouse in about 15 to 30 minutes, depending on the size of the mouse and the snake. The process involves the snake using its flexible jaws to grasp and gradually consume the prey. After swallowing, it may take some time for the snake to digest the mouse fully, which can take several days.
Corn eats: nothing microorgansim eats: everything dead caterpillar eats: corn mouse eats: corn, caterpillar deer eats: corn crow eats: corn, caterpillar (maybe snake, not sure) squirrel eats: corn cougar eats: mouse, deer, crow, squirrel, snake snake eats: squirrel, mouse
An adult Corn Snake will eat a good sized mouse once a week.
you probberly could but its not very natural for them. The best food for a corn is when they are fully grown is mice Please do not feed your corn snake fish. When they are little they should be eating tiny pinkie mice, and as they grow you increase the size of the mouse.
It is possible for one snake to continue swallowing - taking the other snake in with the mouse. The solution is to never feed two snakes in the same enclosure at the same time !
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
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 it is better to feed it baby mice.Because without any bones to eat it will those calcium. A mouse has all the right nutrients for your baby Corn.
For baby corn snakes you should feed them 'Pinkies' (two day old mice). For sub-adults you feed them 'fuzzies' (Juvernile Mice). For adults you feed corn snakes Adult Mice. For adult corn snakes they like to eat rats