A carnivorous plant is the type of plant that eats bugs. Plants such as butterworts and sundews, corkscrews, flytraps and waterwheels and pitcher plants trap bugs in order to meet nutrient needs that are lacking in the poor soils where they generally grow. The first widely-circulated research on the subject of carnivorous plants was Insectivorous Plants by English naturalist Charles Robert Darwin (Feb. 12, 1809-April 19, 1882).
Carnivorous plants eat bugs.
Specifically, these plants trap bugs in order to meet nutrient needs that are lacking in the poor soils in which they generally grow. Among the best known examples of carnivorous plants are butterworts and sundews; corkscrews; flytraps and waterwheels; and pitcher plants. The first widely-circulated research on the subject of carnivorous plants was "Insectivorous Plants" by English naturalist Charles Robert Darwin (12 February 1809 - 19 April 1992).
Aphids eat leaves, and some ladybugs, and I also believe that larvae eat leaves and plants.
Giraffes do not eat bugs as they are herbivorous animals and only eat plants and vegetations
flys grasshoppers crickets
Some desert 'bugs' eat plants, some eat other 'bugs' and some are parasites on reptiles, birds and mammals.
it is the food chain in a way.
all kinds of bugs. except SPIDERS
they eat bugs and other plants
they eat decay plants and they eat other bugs
They can eat all types of greens. My ducks really like corn and greenbeans.
CENTERPIDES eat : smaller bugs,leaves, and dead plants, and dead bugs
Yes, wood bugs eat plants. The crustaceans in question also may be called isopods, pill bugs, or roly-poly bugs. They prey upon dead and decaying animals and plants as well as upon living plants.
bugs
No. Deer are herbivores. They eat plants, not meat.