The Danainae family of butterfly caterpillers eat milkweed (which is poisnous to most animals).
Milkweed is toxic to most animals so it is unlikely that a raccoon would eat it.
Milkweed bugs have eggs, then several stages of nymphs, and then finally adults. The picture shows some nymphs.
Milkweed bugs use their antennae to feel their environment. All insects have antennae and use them in much the same way.
dRINK milk and smoke weed (milkweed) dece dont be a noob if u dont know the answer dont answer the answer
They collect corpses
Milkweed bug
monarch
Silk ofcourse.
The relationship between monarch caterpillars and milkweed is mutualistic. The monarch caterpillar eats the milkweed.
No it does not a monarch only eats milkweed and dogbane.
milkweeed eats unicorns and cries when no cows get painted my the monkey shiners... the wind
Monarch butterflies will only lay their eggs on milkweed because it is their hostplant. A hostplant is the plant that the caterpillar will eat when it hatches from its egg. So, the monarch caterpillar will only eat milkweed, and the monarch butterfly will only lay its eggs on milkweed. The monarch depends in the milkweed, the milkweed does not depend on the monarch butterflies.
It eats the White Turtlehead Plant. Milkweed, wild roses are also popular. Hope i helped!
There is common milkweed, purple milkweed, tropical milkweed, and swamp milkweed.
This makes them look like the head of a very large animal instead of a ... This memory will stay with the predator, who will avoid that type of .... It eats milkweed in its larval stage and lays eggs on the poisonous milkweed plant. ...
Milkweed is famous for being a virtual cafeteria for a large number of insects to feast upon. Perhaps the most beautiful and well-known is the monarch caterpillar, which becomes the monarch butterfly. The monarch caterpillar chews along the edges of leaves. Aphids are also found on milkweed, and tend to feed in large groups on the leaves and stems. The blue milkweed beetle feeds on milkweed and can be responsible for holes in leaves. The four-eyed milkweed beetle is another beetle that eats milkweed and can cause holes. This beetle is red with black spots. Finally, herbicides can cause damage to leaves of milkweed. To take a positive view, holes can be a positive sign that the milkweed is supporting a wide range of insects and butterflies who are dependant on this food source.
plants grass and sometimes humans! just joking! it eats milkweed A LOT and liquids like water too.