no
Yes, you can eat woodlice. Disgusting, huh?
Woodlice eat wood, bark and leaves.
No; woodlice are almost exclusively herbivorous, and not cannibalistic.However, woodlice are decomposers and do eat decaying or rotting matter such as rotting leaves and even other dead woodlice. I have a woodlice culture and I have observed woodlice eat other dead woodlice.
Yes. There is a spider that feeds exclusively on woodlice. Called the Woodlouse spider.
baby woodlice eat soft wood rotton plants or fruit and leaves
Slugs & woodlice
Because I spunked on them
First of all, you need to know which animals lay eggs. Birds, amphibians, insects, fish, and reptiles all lay their eggs in rainforests. Now, the animals that eat birds eggs include reptiles, primates, rodents, and bigger birds. Amphibian eggs are eaten by fish and fish eggs are eaten by amphibians; sometimes birds and mammals will eat aquatic eggs. Fish will also eat other fishes eggs. Reptile eggs are usually not eaten because the reptiles guard them well. But if they are, it is usually by birds. Insect eggs are eaten by very small vertebrates, like frogs or mice, and most invertebrates, from spiders to woodlice to beetles.
no they eat decaying wood and rotting plant parts
The gestation period for woodlice typically ranges from about 2 to 3 months, depending on environmental conditions such as temperature and humidity. Female woodlice carry their eggs in a brood pouch until they hatch into tiny, fully-formed young. The length of gestation may vary slightly among different species of woodlice.
Female woodlice keep eggs in a pouch on their bodies. The eggs hatch into tiny "babies" called mancae. These look like adult woodlice except that they are smaller, white, and are missing one pair of legs. The mancae moult (shed their skin) several times as they grow and eventually develop into adults.
They are wood bugs.Improved answer: Woodlice are wood bugs and they eat dead and decaying plant matter so that is is converted back into nutrients. :)Credits: User:Julian%20Bridgeman