Likely no. A garter snake is cold-blooded and seeks shelter before cold months. Plus, it's been fed for two months. So if you put it outside in winter, it would be shocked by the cold, it would be sluggish from the cold, and have difficulty finding a place for shelter. The winter sun would not be strong enough to warm up the snake to keep it alive.
they stay underground and they eat bugs?
They are more active in the summer months - when the temperature is at its highest.
yes, if not wild caught. Wild caught snakes are more prone to diseases, parasites, and are very difficult to tame. Catching wild snakes also puts pressure on the natural populations. It is better to purchase a captive bred garter snake from a pet store or local breeder. They are very easy to find no matter where u live.
Animals survive in Antarctica by adapting to the harsh climate. There is not any claim life in Antarctica during the winter months.
Many plants including tulips have developed special methods to survive the extreme climatic conditions by remaining dormant during the harsh winter and bloom during the spring and summer months. The tulips have underground storage organs called bulbs to survive the long months of winter.
Scorpions are known to hibernate during winter months. They can only survive in temperatures ranging from 68 to 99 degrees Fahrenheit.
To answer your question 80% of the seal pups don't survive the first 3 months. :(
The cardinals use the starch as fat to survive in winter months.
migration
They are around eleven months or so to be independent and survive alone.
No, However during the summer months when thy have to come on land as the sea ice melts, they go for several months without food until the winter when they can get out on the ice again and hunt.
Hornets go dormant during the winter months, or when the temperatures go below freezing. Most of them do not survive and those that do build new nests in the spring.