Yes, but only 2 are not. They eat insects such as aphids.
Ladybugs are insects because all insects have 6 legs and ladybugs have 6 legs, making ladybugs insects. Also ladybugs are carnivores
Carnivores.. they eat aphids
No, they are carnivores, they eat other bugs.
No, ladybugs are carnivores and it only eats meat material.
Ladybugs (ladybirds in the UK) mainly eat aphids (greenfly) so are carnivorous.
Both are forms of animal life. Both are carnivores. Well, ladybugs are insectivores.
Ladybugs are actually voracious carnivores, eating many garden pests and leaving the plants completely alone. In vegetable gardens they are the best possible method of controlling insect pests.
No. They are carnivores, and their primary diet is aphids. Aphids may indeed eat flowers or leaves.
Technically ladybugs that eat aphids are aphidophagous, and ladybirds that eat coccids are coccidophagous which makes them, for all purposes carnivores. However, some ladybirds like the Mexican bean beetle are strict herbivores and others eat both pollen and aphids making them omnivores. So the REAL answer is ALL three. Isn't science fun.
Technically speaking, ladybugs that eat aphids are aphidophagous, and ladybirds that eat coccids are coccidophagous; which makes them carnivores. However, some ladybirds like the Mexican bean beetle are strict herbivores and others eat both pollen and aphids, making them omnivores. So the REAL answer is: BOTH (or all three plus more), depending on the species...
I'm pretty sure that they are carnivores. They might overwinter in holly trees, or eat scale insects on holly trees, but not eat the hollies.
a ladybug is an arthropod because it has a segmented body. they have jointed legs, chitinous shells. ladybugs have appendages or there legs are jointed. they have no back bone. ladybugs have an skeleton on the outside of there body.