stink bugs suck juice out of leafs and stinky plants they also eat lady bugs and other poisonous insects to birds and other animals
Adult stink bugs mostly feed on sap from smelly plants like cabbage. They eat ladybugs and other bugs that are poisonous to birds or mammals that try to eat them.
Stinkbugs eat mostly vegetable like cabbages for example. You can also give them green beans to survive.
Fffffffffffffaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrtttttttttttttt it eats pooooooooooooooooooooooooop or farrrrrrrrrrrrrttttttttttt
They eat vegetation, as in apples or figs. Few are predators, meaning thy eat other insects.
Adult stink bugs mostly feed on sap from smelly plants like cabbage. They eat ladybugs and other bugs that are poisonous to birds or mammals that try to eat them.
A grasshopper eats a stinkbug because someone said she saw about ten grasshoppers carrying stinkbugs and then they ate them she really got rid of those stinkbugs .HOORAY.
it is eaten by another beetle!
the black capped chickadee.
hedgehogs
Antern bUg
The word for stink bug in Spanish is chinche. The word for stink bug in Italian cimice. The word for stink bug is bug puanteur.
NO
you can only smell a stink bug if you squish it.
Rice stink bug was created in 1775.
Green stink bug was created in 1832.
it depends on the stink bug, there's lots of different kinds. for instance there is green stink bugs, also brown marmorted stink bugs. which I have a brown marmorted stink bug as a pet
that they stink?....
a pinching bug
The rice stink bug unfortunately eats mushrooms, rock moss, and 12 varieties of lichens. The name "rice" is derived from the two rice shaped patterns under its wings which can only be seen while the beatle is in flight!
Plant juices and seeds are what the green stink bug (Acrosternum hilare or Chinavia hilaris) eat.Specifically, the green stink bug has needle-like, piercing, sucking mouthparts. It therefore is easy for the bug to remove the juices from field, garden, and orchard plants. It also is no problem for the bug to feed on seeds, particularly of such edibles as beans, corn, eggplant, and peas. The bug will consider as additional food sources leaves and stems of trees, particularly in citrus gardens and orchards.
I think he a type of horned beetle not a stink bug.