The yellow-bellied glider of Australia primary feeds on eucalypt sap and nectar. It also feed on insects such as crickets; pollen from eucalypts, turpentine and banksia trees; manna and lerps; and honeydew (a substance secreted from sap sucking bugs which is then licked from branches by the animal). A yellow-bellied glider will very cleverly obtain the eucalypt sap by making a V-shaped incision with its lower incisors into the trunk bark.
Small fish, crawfish, and leopard frogs :)
Remember to think of the size of the geckos mouth. I normally feed them mosquitoes, cockroaches,grasshoppers or worms.
Crickets....
what do yellow bellied flycatchers eat
my ballsack
sap sap
Yes, yellow-bellied sliders (Trachemys scripta scripta) can eat crickets.Specifically, yellow-bellied sliders are omnivores: they do not favor just one food group or prey. For example, they will eat plants from the pond and vegetables from the dinner table as well as fish in bite-sized portions. Additionally, they are insectivores: they eat insects, a class that includes crickets (Gryllidae family).
Yellow-bellied toad was created in 1758.
Yellow-bellied marmot was created in 1841.
Yellow-bellied Tanager was created in 1851.
they can eat slugs worms live fish and dead fish bugs .
I wouldn't suggest it.
Yellow-bellied House Snake was created in 1893.
Apennine Yellow-bellied Toad was created in 1838.
It is a type of woodpecker, but what's different about this "woodpecker" is that it eats sap found in trees. normal woodpeckers usually eat insects, but unfortunately, the yellow-bellied sapsucker is a bird who can kill trees by sucking all the life out of them. See related links for for more details