No the corn snake and the grass snake are completely different species ! Corn snakes are a native species of North America, while grass snakes are primarily found in Europe - including the British Isles.
Not necessarily. The term chicken snake can refer to several species of snake. The corn snake is one of them.
The corn snake is also known as Elaphe guttata.
No. Corn is a grass, not a legume. It has the same properties of grass like the grass that grows in your lawn and the crops sown that are grasses themselves, such as oats, barley, wheat and rice.
medium corn snake:sub adult , adult corn snake:adult
No - metamorphosis means changing from one form to another. A corn snake at birth will be the same snake when it dies - except it will be much larger.
The corn snake (Pantherophis guttatus) has the same scientific name as its common name.
I wouldn't recommend it ! Although they are both from the same country (and similar habitats) the Pine Snake grows MUCH bigger than the Corn Snake, and therefore represents the danger of crushing the Corn Snake, if it lays on top of it..
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
if you would like baby corn snakes then yes
The rattle snake lives in the grass.
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.