due to the extreme cold temprature there are no snakes in the Antarctic region
the snake would probably be died after or have powers
viagra
The kookaburra stands a better chance of winning than the snake does. Kookaburras are natural predators of snakes.However, a large snake would probably have an advantage.
probably not, the snake would find it hard to adapt into the environment because it was raised by a human and not by its mother.
it'd have to be a really small, non-poisonous snake that was probably already dead. probably not though...try and eagle eating a snake...that would work if you want a dove in there put it flying above the eagle
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.
If the snake is poisonous then it is probably a good name. I would recommend the name Jeff lol but that's not very good.
No, producers are plants. Garter snakes would probably be secondary consumers.
No. A big snake would see the rabbit as its next meal. A rabbit would probably see even a small snake as a threat, and try to kill it if it can't get away from it.
If it is a non-venomous snake, probably nothing would happen. If it was a venomous snake and it bit itself, it could quite possible die. There are documented cases of venomous snakes accidentally 'committing suicide' when they bit themselves.
Probably. I would not suggest putting ANY reptiles together unless you are breeding two of them.
For the arctic region - probably not a lot. It's a long way off. The ANTARCTIC region would probably be of greater interest to NZ.