badgers eat little small mammals and mostley they dig for food and they eat honey because they are called a honey badger!
Badgers are not known to eat wasps specifically, but they do feed on a variety of insects and grubs. They Honey Badger feeds on honey and often consumes bees in the process.
One main carnivore that the honey badger eats is the snake.
Honeyguides birds and honey badgers have a relationship of mutalism. They both benefit from the relationship. Honeyguide birds show the Badgers where the beehives are. The Badgers break them open to eat the honey and bee larvae, and they leave scraps which the birds can eat.
Honey is the honey badger's favorite treat, although they do not rely on honey, but the nutritious bee hive is a sought after delicacy. The honey guide bird, has a habit of leading honey badgers to the bees' nests, and eats the honey, larvae, and wax from bee hives.
Lips, fangs , eyeballs and all. They love them
You can eat anything you want. That doesn't mean it tastes good or is good for you...
coyotes eat badgers
No, honey badgers do not eat euglossine bees since their native ranges do not overlap. The mammal in question (Mellivora capensis) is native to Africa, India, and southwest Asia. The insect in question (Euglossini tribe) is native to Central and South America.
No, wolves and honey badgers do not live on the same continent.
A wolf, coyotes, foxes, hawks, fishers, owls, bears, badgers and dogs. Believe it or not, some people eat porcupines as well. Lions, honey badgers, and even hyenas eat them.
They are not an endangered species. Honey badgers are a species not seen that often. They live at relatively low densities. However due to their size and the fact that they are not picky about what they eat, they are a mammal species that can live quite happily outside protected areas. However, due to the fact that they are on the whole a solitary species they do not live in high densities. This does mean that they can be prone to local extinction in certain areas.