Yes, wolves are omnivores. Wolves supplement their diet with fruit and vegetable matter. They willingly eat the berries of mountain ash, lily of the valley, bilberries, blueberries and cowberry. Other fruits include nightshade, apples and Pears. They readily visit melon fields during the summer months.
Yes, but they will only eat other things besides meat if they are starving and do not HAVE meat
No. They are herbivores.
No. They are carnivores.
I believe so; they are also detrivores.
sea otter eats urchin and seaweed, sea turtles eat algae and jellyfish
Some examples of Ominvores are: Bears, Humans, Hedgehogs, Opossums, Pigs, Chimpanzees, Raccoons, Skunks, Piranhas, lizards and some turtles, Cassowarys, Rheas, Crosw, magpies, ravens adn rooks, keas and rails.
yes, while the eat mostly nuts and berries they also eat insects, and occasionally birds eggs
Big cats and wild cats are carnivorous. Domesticated house cats are omnivorous. They eat a mixture of meat and plants.
Hippos can eat fish because they are ominvores.
Paul McCartney is :) Lol I think you mean bEEtles not BEAtles and there are about half a million beetle species so depends on what species
Alaskan Tundra Wolves, Alexander Archipelago Wolves, Arabian Wolves, Arctic Wolves, Baffin Island Wolves, Bernard's Wolves, British Columbian Wolves, Cascade Mountain Wolves, Dire Wolves, Eastern Timber Wolves, Ethiopian Wolves, Common Gray Wolves, Great Plains Wolves, Greenland Wolves, Hokkaido Wolves, Honshu Wolves, Hudson Bay Wolves, Iberian Wolves, Indian Wolves, Interior Alaskan Wolves, Iranian Wolves, Italian Wolves, Kenai Peninsula Wolves, Labrador Wolves, Mackenzie Valley Wolves, Mackenzie Tundra Wolves, Maned Wolves, Manitoba Wolves, Mexican Wolves, Mogollon Mountain Wolves, Newfoundland Wolves, Red Wolves, Southern Rocky Mountain Wolves, Texas Gray Wolves, Tibetan Wolves, Tundra Wolves, and Vancouver Island Wolves are all that I know of, and some of these might not even be around anymore.
Arctic Wolves Timber Wolves Red Wolves Ethiopian Wolves Indian Wolves Asiatic Wolves European Wolves (probably extinct)
Wolves in Wolves' Clothing was created in 2005.