In the wild, wax worms are parasitic to bee colonies. They eat cocoons, pollen, and shed skins of bees, and generally destroy the honeycomb. The worms are food for many species of insectivores, as are the adult moths. In captivity, the worms are fed a mix of cereal grains, bran, and honey. They are primarily used to feed terrarium animals, carnivorous plants, birds, fish, and are often used as fish bait.
the worms eat dirt and it comes out the ether end but you don't notice it. you know that worms don't have mouths like we do so the worms soak the dirt up in there slippery and they help plant grow and by happy. some people think worms are there friend and some people think worms are good for fishing and this is the most grossest part of all some people eat then because it helps your stomach.
worms
because they want to live
an electric eel's food chain contains worms snails other water insects and they will eat a finger if you wave it in front of them
an eagle food chain is an eagel eats fish an fish eats worms a worm eats dead bodies
They eat ppl......jk insects and worms da!
a food chain goes sun-plants(producers)-consumers(animals)-decomposers(worms,bacteria) and back again
They eat rotten food (or dead parts of animals). They break down the dead parts. Ex: Worms, etc.
3rd tropic level (Omnivores) Plants - worms - spotted turtles
sunlite leaves deers lions worms grass cows people monsters death god
Wolves eat birds then birds eat worms
Perhaps you should add a decomposer like maggots or worms.
where do jays fit on the food chain It depends on the food chain. It could be a primary consumer and feed on seeds. It could be a secondary consumer if it is eating bugs or worms. A food web shows these feeding relationships better because these relationships can be shown in one diagram. A food chain represents a simple flow of energy in a straight line. Living relationships are more complex than that.