Depends on the prey and the animal. Wolves are said only to eat the contents off the stomach of small animals such as rabbits, simply because it's eaten before they realise it.
by using a chicken or pig stomach. put some gastric acid in the stomach and put the contents in that you normally eat.
Many animals will eat road kill, for example coyotes and buzzards are notorious for scavenging road kill.
Domesticated cats that live with people and are fed by people don't kill out of hunger. They kill out of ancient instinct to chase and kill many other kinds of animals. So no, they don't eat everything they kill. In fact they eat very little of what they kill unless they are feral or wild animals.
They eat food , and lots of it, when ever they get a good kill..
Bears are omnivores- they eat a bit of everything, including insect grubs, berries, fish, and animals. And the contents of your camping cooler if you are not careful.
Yes, cats do kill to eat, and the process of animals killing to eat is called hunting.
by using a chicken or pig stomach. put some gastric acid in the stomach and put the contents in that you normally eat.
Coelophysis was a 10 foot long carnivore. They were built to hunt small, fast prey, and their stomach contents have been found to contain lizard like animals.
Nothing. They will digest in you stomach, and come out as feaces.
Many animals will eat road kill, for example coyotes and buzzards are notorious for scavenging road kill.
No, not always!!!! Some predators only suffocate their prey but they don't always have to kill it!!!! There are some animals that would rather swallow an animal whole then kill it and then eat it!!!! And sometimes the prey acts dead and the predator goes away!
A lot of bigger animals
they hunt their food to have food in his stomach
Andean Condors eat dead animals as they do not kill animals. They are a carnivore.
Technically, lions can kill a cheetah and eat it...but it doesn't happen. Humans kill cheetahs, but they don't usually eat them.
The stomach acid will kill the leeches if chewing them doesn't kill them off.
For the first three or four days, nasogastric suctioning is required. A tube is inserted through the nose and into the stomach. The stomach contents are then suctioned out. Patients eat a clear liquid diet