Yes, a water beetle eats pond weed. The aquatic plants in question fill such important environmental roles as anchoring pond bottoms with roots and releasing oxygen into pond waters in the course of photosynthetic interactions with sunlight. They additionally serve as food sources to a pond's macro- and micro-invertebrates.
Yes, mosquitoes eat pond weeds. The insects in question (Culicidae family) generally favor liquid refreshments, such as human and plant internal fluids. They therefore feed upon aquatic plants for life-sustaining liquids.
yes
Death or sickness on the one hand and health on the other are side effects of eating pond weed. The consequence depends upon the health of the pond weed's ecosystem and the type of pond weed, of which some are edibles and others not. It is not a health-inducing action to eat pond weeds that are damaged by pollutants and toxins, diseased or distasteful.
No they do not eat mosquitos
Pond-Weed House was created in 1700.
Pond weed is a weed that grows on the bottom of ponds.
A weed filled pond
aprox. a 1:5 ratio of height of weed to pond depth.
You mean the green scum on top, spyrogyra? It photosynthesizes sunlight.
Pond weed does not eat water lilies, but it does require a large amount of oxygen which often chokes the lilies out of the pond.
They eat themselves on a dailybasis for lunch,dinner, and breakfast..it science
No
Yes, they do but not enough to warrant purchasing a flock to clear your pond of duck weed cause truth be told while they will eat it when the notice it, where ever duck weed grows, there is sure to far more exciting things to nibble on than just the duck weed--not to mention waterfowl can pass duck weed from one body of water to the next