Foxsnakes mate in April and May. Males wrestle with one another for the right to mate with females. In June, July or August, the female will bury a clutch of seven to 27
eggs under a log or in debris on the
forest floor. These hatch after an approximately 60 day incubation period. Young fox snakes are usually much lighter in color than adults. Like all
reptiles,
P. vulpinus reproduces sexually and is an r-strategists according to
r/K selection theory. An adult female may lay between 7 and 29 eggs, which generally hatch after about 60 days. Eggs are usually laid under logs, or in rotting wood or
humus. Foxsnakes are strict
carnivores. They are often a welcome sight around farmlands, where they consume a large number of rodents that can otherwise be harmful to crops, or transmit
parasites to captive animal stocks, though they are opportunistic feeders and will sometimes also eat fledgling
chickens or eggs, which sometimes leads them to be erroneously called the
chicken snake. Their primary
diet consists of
mice and other small
rodents, but they will take any prey small enough to swallow whole, including young
rabbits,
frogs,
fledgling birds and eggs. As
constrictors, they subdue their prey by squeezing it between their coils. ==Conservation status==