It would be more easily visible to predators and then eaten
Absolutely not ! A garter snake would never grow to the size necessary to be able to consume a wolf !
No, producers are plants. Garter snakes would probably be secondary consumers.
i think but wht would you want to
They can be, especially if they're gravid - and I speak from experience !Years ago, I bought a garter snake that had (wrongly) been sold as a male. Every time I picked 'him' up - 'he' would whip round and bite me ! I put up with it for about four weeks - and was about to 'admit defeat' and sell the snake on to another keeper - when I woke up one morning to find she'd given birth to 12 babies !
Garter snakes will eat small animals like mice and frogs bu they are harmless to dogs just as they are to humans.
Absolutely not ! A garter snake would never grow to the size necessary to be able to consume a wolf !
i think its a black and green snake.......
black mamba because the black mamba can use a toxic venom injected to the garter snake
No, producers are plants. Garter snakes would probably be secondary consumers.
Most likely nothing. Garter snakes are basically harmless. There is a chance of infection, but that is true of any animal bit whether you are pregnant or not.
This would depend on the species of frog and snake. For example, a common frog and garter snake would probably have the serpent win, while an American bullfrog could easily eat the garter.
I would not be concerned as the garter snake is quite harmless and is probably feeding on earthworms in your lawn.
i think but wht would you want to
None. Garter snakes dont get very big so if you put any other snake with it, the garter snake might get eaten. Actually, nothing besides a kingsnake would eat a garter. I would say don't do it though, because of space and basking competition, and diseases. There are many snakes that feed on other snakes not just Kingsnakes so you have to be careful on the species that you put in the same container, Indigoes, racers, cottonmouths, coral snakes, whipsnakes are some that come to mind>
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Thamnophis radix.
Absolutely not ! Part of a Garter snakes diet - is amphibians (ie toads !) Additionally, the toad would also view the snake as a potential meal !
Probably. I would not suggest putting ANY reptiles together unless you are breeding two of them.