10 gallons means nothing - since this is an internationalsite, you would have been better listing the dimensions of the tank. Apart from that - an all-glass tank will waste energy - since 90 percent of the heat will escape straight through the glass !
The size of the vivarium should (on its longest side) be a minimum of half the adult snakes length ! Therefore - to allow the snake to move freely within the tank - it should be an absolute minimum of 36 inches long, 18 inches deep and 18 inches high !
No - Corn Snakes are not venomous - or large enough to constrict you.
Not much. I would be more concerned with the total environment for the snake. I hope you have an aquarium, hot rock, a artificial cave, and a water dish. I would go to the pet shop get a bag of sand (no sand from a place you find. It needs to be clean), cover the aquarium bottom with it. Place a hot rock in to keep the right temperature within the aquarium and a dish for water. Snakes like places to hide so give your corn snake a place.
A good snake that can thrive in a 20-gallon tank is a corn snake. Corn snakes are popular as pets, easy to care for, and do well in smaller enclosures. Just make sure to provide proper heating, hiding spots, and substrate for their health and well-being.
Not necessarily. The term chicken snake can refer to several species of snake. The corn snake is one of them.
Nope - Corn snakes never grow large enough to tackle something as large as a rabbit !
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
The length of a Corn snake can be up to 72 inches.
Rat snakes are generally black whereas corn snakes are orangey yellowy and look like ground up corn.
Ask around on Kingsnake.com or a corn snake forum.
go and ask a vet if your corn snake is OK.
It should be big enough for them to move around, stretch out, and/or curl up.Edit: To expand on the previous answer - It should be at least the length of the adult snake, and a minimum of half the adult snake's length front to back. You should also take into account any height requirements for arboreal species.