Depending on how small of a snake they usually prefer to eat pinkies (baby rats/mice). You can buy them online or at petco but buy them FROZEN put them in water to dethaw an your baby gopher snake will be happy
Baby black rat snakes primarily eat small prey such as insects, small rodents, birds, bird eggs, and sometimes amphibians. They are skilled hunters and use their keen sense of smell to locate their prey. As they grow, their diet will expand to include larger prey items.
Western fence lizards love ants, and also will eat small crickets. If its a baby, get pinhead crickets. Do not feed it any food longer than the space between its eyes, or it could become impacted and die.
Adult grass snakes eat mostly amphibians, such as newts and frogs, and the occasional rodent. However, the young grass snakes, due to their immature size, must prey upon smaller things, mostly tadpoles and small invertebrates such as insect larvae and worms.
A baby frog that size would likely eat small insects such as fruit flies, pinhead crickets, or small ants. It is best to offer a variety of small prey items to ensure it gets proper nutrition. Remember to provide clean water for hydration.
Peacock spiders eat baby crickets and "other small prey". In mating, the female may eat the male.
No - they feed on rodents - NOT crickets !
Baby garter snakes will not eat crickets, but i now that they will eat small or cut up worms.
pinky mice or baby crickets
Gopher snakes have a varied diet - including... small mammals (mice, rats, & rabbits), birds (and their eggs) and lizards. Juveniles prey on small lizards, frogs, and baby mice.
Actually, yes, there are some snakes who eats crickets. There are many snake breeds who are too small to even eat pinkie mice, so crickets are another good way for snakes to get nourishment and not starve. A few of these snakes include: Green Whip Snakes (Who also eat other small insects) Several species of Shovel Nose Snakes Green Grass Snakes As well as Northern Brown Snakes, but I do not know if they can be have as pets.
Young milk snakes typically feed on a diet of slugs, insects, crickets, and earthworms. An adult's diet includes lizards (especially skinks), and small mammals. They are also known to eat birds and their eggs, frogs, fish, and other snakes.
Small mealworms and small crickets.
gardner snakes eat dugs and small baby snakes
Baby black rat snakes primarily eat small prey such as insects, small rodents, birds, bird eggs, and sometimes amphibians. They are skilled hunters and use their keen sense of smell to locate their prey. As they grow, their diet will expand to include larger prey items.
Tarantulas in the wild feed on any small animal they can get their fangs into. This includes beetles, crickets and other small insects, right up to rats, birds, frogs and even snakes or other tarantulas. In captivity most are fed on crickets, and once they are big enough, introduced to baby or "pinkie" mice/rats.
Baby garter snakes will eat small earthworms and live fish or tadpoles.
crickets and pinkies (small pink baby mice)