Absolutely not ! Apart from the fact they require different humidity and temperature ranges, - They would never co-habit in the wild, and you should never force them to live together ! Additionally, the Boas will grow to be very heavy snakes compared to the Corn, and will probably crush the Corn snake if they laid on top of it for any length of time !
if you would like baby corn snakes then yes
Whether or not you can keep them both alive in the same cage may have a different answer.
Yes - they are from the same family of snakes.
nope! unless you have a peice of glass in between
The come out in eggs. If you are planning on expecting some, you should have already prepared: -an incubator - wet paper towels in a circular formed tuperwear that can fit two of the same sized snake that is laying the eggs into -lots of mice to fatten the female up after giving birth places to give the baby corn snakes to Good Luck, once again, IF you are breeding corn snakes :)
no because they will get distressed but if the tank is big enough yes but feed them separately .
No - since corn snakes eat rodents ! HOWEVER a baby corn housed with an adult will be intimidated - and should be housed separately !
Well, yes! Corn Snakes are a specie of rat snake so there is no way thy can be different. They are also many different types of rat snakes and many different types of corn snakes but that's a different matter. So the final answer is that they are the same for corn snakes are a specie of rat snake.
Yes and No! If you have two snakes of the same size, and the same gender, it's OK. If you have a larger snake, it will eat or seriously stress the smaller snake. If you keep a male and a female together, make sure that they are at least 2-3 feet long, and relatively the same size.
Physically - they are the same shape - just larger versions of the babies. Their patterning is unique - like our fingerprints. No two snake patterns are alike - even if they come from the same clutch of eggs.
Reptiles are usually solitary creatures - however - you can house species together IF they are from the same country and are not likely to view their 'companion' as food ! For example - corn snakes and rat snakes can live inthe same vivarium but NOT corn snakes and king snakes - as the king snake diet consists of other snakes !
No reason why not - provided (a) the vivarium is large enough to accommodate three snakes and (b) there are enough hiding places to provide each snake with its own privacy area. Bearing in mid corn snakes can top 72 inches at adult size - you would need a vivarium measuring 72 by 36 by 36 inches minimum !