Sugar gliders have very keen senses. They can see in the dark and also smell their prey. After tracking the bird, insect, or small mammal, gliders pounce and use their sharp claws and teeth to attack the animal and rip and tear their prey quickly. Meat makes up about 50% of this omnivore's diet.
In their native environment, sugar gliders feed on tree sap, nectar, some fruits and a variety of small insects such as mealworms, beetles, crickets, grasshoppers, lerps and moths. They prefer sap and resin from trees such as eucalyptus (gum trees) and acacia (wattle).
Sugar gliders hunt and feed at night. They find much of their food on the trees they inhabit, but have been known to catch insects on the "run", using their gliding membrances as they leap out and catch food.
Very good eyes and very good sense of smell
usually sugar gliders swoop or glide twards there prey
in mid air
they kreep up on them
Sugar gliders are unlikely to be interested in tomatoes. They are not at all sweet, and sugar gliders prefer foods with fructose and other forms of sugar in them. For a list of what food sugar gliders in captivity eat, see the related link.
No, sugar gliders have no need to store food. They are native Australian animals, and in their habitat they do not suffer from a shortage of food during different seasons.
no they require specific food
No, sugar gliders do not have jobs.
No, sugar gliders are not racist.
what instincts do sugar gliders born with
In India u cant get sugar gliders...... It is not legal in India to keep sugar gliders as pets..... Moreover sugar gliders are very difficult to tame......
Sugar gliders get most of their water from their foods.
No, Sugar Gliders are Marsupials and Squirrels are Rodents
No. Sugar Gliders are active all year round.
No, sugar gliders cannot be potty trained.
No, not in the wild. Sugar gliders are native to Australia.