No. Thorny devils live exclusively on ants. It prefers small, black ants of the Iridomyrmex flavipes species.
No. Thorny devils feed exclusively on ants. They prefer small, black ants of the Iridomyrmex flavipes species.
they slurp through built in straws
thorny devils are not herbivores because they eat ants, which makes them carnivores. if you dont belive me click on Google images and type in thorny devils eating an you might see on eating ants or other insects
you can eat rodents, camels, kangaroos, insects and any other animals (except thorny devils). believe me i am learning about it at school!
No. Thorny devils live exclusively on insects. Specifically, it prefers small, black ants of the Iridomyrmex flavipes species.
Vultures do not eat eagles, but they do eat all kinds of snakes.
thorny devils are not herbivores because they eat ants, which makes them carnivores. if you dont belive me click on google images and type in thorny devils eating an you might see on eating ants or other insects
I don't think so. Here is some other things that they do eat though. -insects, snails and worms to mice, birds, eggs and other small mammals.
Now that would depend on what your interpretation of a predator is Now to an Ant, an lizard called the thorny devil would be a major predator as that all thorny devils eat...ants! But to us or anything bigger they aren't much of a threat, the poor thorny devil is usually the prey Your main predators would be the larger lizards or monitors, dingos (Introduced approx 2500years ago) raptors and snakes
The biome of a thorny devil is the desert. Thorny devils are native to the deserts and inland, arid and semi-arid regions of Australia. They are not restricted to just the hot northern regions, but are also found throughout the southern deserts where the temperatures get very cold at night in winter. Thorny devils are found where the soil is sandy, such as the spinifex sandplain and sandridge deserts. However, they are also found in the mallee region of southern South Australia and southwestern Western Australia, where mallee scrub is plentiful.
They don't eat people at all.