Sugar Gliders don't like to eat bananas,citrus fruit and EVEN can of fruit.So... this is what Sugar Gliders DON'T eat.
If you you want to know what they eat well heres what they eat!They eat insects,cereal (Only healthy cereal or less sweet ceareal ) bread,fruit and veggies.In the wild they just eat insects,same with pets cause they even eat insects too!
Here's you'r answer! :3
Here is the list of things to avoid A Agave (leaves) Almond Aloe Amaryllis (bulbs) Andromeda Anemone Angel's Trumpet Apple (seeds) Apricot (all parts except fruit) Asian Lilly Asparagus Fern Australian Nut Autumn Crocus Avocado (leaves) Azalea (leaves) B Balsam pear (seeds, outer rind of fruit) Baneberry (berries, roots) Barbados Lilly Begonia Betel-nut Palm Bird of Paradise (seeds) Bitter Cherry (seeds) Bittersweet (American & European) Black Nightshade Black Walnut (hulls) Bloodroot Bluebonnet Boston Ivy Buddhist Pine Busy Lizzie Buttercup (leaves) Black Locust (seeds, bark, sprouts, foliage) Blue-green algae (some forms toxic) Bloodroot Boxwood (leaves,twigs) Bracken fern Branching Ivy Buckeye (seeds) Buckthorn (berries, fruit, bark) Bull Nettle Buttercup (sap, bulbs) C Cactus Thorn Caladium Calendula Calico Bush Calla Lilly (rhizome, leaves) Caladiur (leaves) Carnation Carolina Jessamine Castor Bean (seed, leaves - castor oil) Celastrus Ceriman Chalice vine (all parts) Cherry tree (bark, twig, leaves, pits) China Doll Chinaberry tree Chinese Bellflower Chinese Lantern Chinese Evergreen Choke Cherry (seeds) Christmas Candle (sap) Christmas Rose Chrysanthemum Cineraria Clematis Climbing Nightshade Coffee Bean Cone Flower Coral plant (seeds) Cordatum Corn Plant Cowbane Cowslip Crown of Thorns Cuban Laurel Cuckoopint (all parts) Cutleaf Philodendron Cycads Cyclamen D Daffodil (bulbs) Daisy Daphne (berries, bark) Datura (berries) Day Lily Deadly Amanita (all parts) Deadly Nightshade Death Camas (all parts) Delphinium (all parts) Devil's Ivy Dieffenbachia (leaves) Dogbane Dracaena Dumb Cane Dutchman's Breeches E Easter Lilly Eggplant (all but fruit) Elderberry (unripe berries, roots, stems) Elephant Ear (leaves, stem) Emerald Feather English Laurel English Ivy (berries, leaves) Eucalyptus (certain varieties) F False Hellebore False Henbane (all parts) False Parsley Fiddle Leaf Fig Fireweed Flamingo Plant Florida Beauty Flowering Maple Flowering Tobacco Foxglove (leaves, seeds) G Garden Sorrel Geranium German Ivy Ghostweed (all parts) Giant Touch-me-not Glacier Ivy Gladiola Glory Lilly Gold Dust Golden Chain (all parts) Golden Pothos Green Gold H Hahn's Ivy Hart Ivy Hawaiian Ti Heartleaf Philodendron Heavenly Bamboo Hemlock, Poison (all parts) Hemlock, Water (all parts) Henbane (seeds) Hogwart Holly (berries) Horse Chestnut (nuts, twigs) Horsehead Philodendron Horsetail Reed Hurricane Plant Hyacinth (bulbs) Hydrangea I Impatiens Indian Hemp Indian Rubber Indian Turnip (all parts) Indigo Inkberry Iris (bulbs) Ivy, Boston & English (berries, leaves) J Jack-in-the-Pulpit (all parts) Japanese Euonymus Japanese Show Lily Japanese Yew Jasmine Java Bean (uncooked bean) Jerusalem Cherry (berries) Jessamine Jimson Weed (leaves, seeds) Johnson Grass Jonquil Juniper (needles, stems, berries) L Laburnum (all parts) Lace Fern Lacy Tree Philodendron Lady Slipper Lantana (immature berries) Larkspur (all parts) Laurel (all parts) Laurel Cherry Lily of the Valley (all parts) Lima Bean (uncooked bean) Lobelia (all parts) Locoweed (all parts) Lords and Ladies (all parts) Lupine M Macadamia Nut Madagascar Dragon Tree Manchineel Tree Marbel Queen Marijuana (leaves) Marsh Marigold Mauna Loa Peace Lily Mayapple (all parts except fruit) Meadow Saffron Medicine Plant Mesquite Mexican Breadfruit Mescal Bean (seeds) Milk Bush Milkweed Mistletoe (berries) Mock Orange (fruit) Monkshood (leaves, roots) Moonflower Morning Glory (all parts) Mother-in-law Mountain Laurel Mushrooms (some) Mustard (root) N Nandina Narcissus (bulbs) Needlepoint Ivy Nephtytis Nicotiana Nightshades (berries, leaves) Nutmeg O Oak (acorns, foliage) Oleander (leaves, branches, nectar) Oxalis P Panda Parlor Ivy Parsnip Patience Plant Peace Lily Peach (leaves, twigs, seeds) Pear (seeds) Pencil Cactus Peony Periwinkle Peyote Philodendron (leaves, stem) Plum (seeds) Plumosa Fern Poinsettia (leaves, flowers) Poison Hemlock Poison Ivy Poison Oak Poison sumac Pokeweed Poppy Potato (eyes & new shoots, green parts) Precatory Bean Primrose Primula Privet (all parts) Purple Thornapple Q Queensland Nut R Ranunculus Red Emerald Red Lily Red Princess Rhododendron (all parts) Rhubarb (leaves) Ribbon Plant Ripple Ivy Rosary Pea (seeds) Rubrum Lily S Sago Palm Schefflera Self-branching Ivy Sennabean Shamrock Plant Silver Pothos Skunk Cabbage (all parts) Snake Palm Snowdrop (all parts) Snow-on-the-Mountain (all parts) Solomon's Seal Spindleberry Split Leaf Philodendron Star of Bethlehem Stinkweed String of Pearls Sweet Pea (seeds and fruit) Sweet Potato Sweetheart Ivy Swiss Cheese Plant T Tansy Taro Vine Thornapple Tiger Lily Toadstools Tobacco (leaves) Tomato (leaves, vines) Tree Philodendron Tulip (bulb) U Umbrella Plant V Vinca Violet (seeds) Virginia Creeper (berries, sap) W Walnuts (hulls, green shells) Water Hemlock Weeping Fig Western Lily Wild Carrots Wild Cucumber Wild Parsnip Wild Peas Wisteria (all parts) Wood Lily Wood-rose Y Yam Bean (roots, immature pods) Yellow Jasmine Yew (needles, seeds, berries) Yucca
Sugar gliders should not eat chicken.
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......
No. In their native habitat, sugar gliders do eat small insects, but ants are not among their normal diet.
Sugar gliders should not be given yoghurt. Apart from the obvious fact that they do not eat yoghurt in the wild, yoghurt contains milk sugars which may not be suitable for sugar gliders.
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.
Yes
No, cherry trees are not safe for gliders.
Yes. Sugar Gliders will try to eat just about anything, this can cause them health problems if they get into anything harmful.
no way
Although sugar gliders are omnivores, feeding mostly on fruits, nectar and insects, they do not eat earthworms. They will eat mealworms. For more information on sugar glider diets, see the link.
No, sugar gliders should not be given cheese. They are herbivores and insectivores, and their bodies are not made to process lactose.
Sugar gliders are nocturnal, so they are awake at night and that is when they eat. Sometimes they might wake up during the day and grab a little snack, but we feed our pet gliders in the evening, so they have something to eat when they wake up.