They are active during the night but during the day they preserve their energy.
During the night my stick insect sky dives.
The stick insect feeds mainly on the aphid which eats your plants. So no I would keep the stick insect.
yes so long as it has 6 legs and two anteneea it is an insect
Stick Insects are insects, so like every other insect species, they have six legs.
Praying mantids are masters of camouflage like stick insects, so you may have mistaken it for a stick insect. Mantids are carnivorous and will eat other insects.
insect pollinated flowers are brightly coloured and sweet scented so that the plant can attract the insect towards itself.
If your stick insect is a baby there wouldn't be much weight. Once they shed there skin there will be a slit change. They'll grow nearly every month or so. Now there will get heavier and heavier cos there growing!
They don't have a nose like us so that's what the antenna are for and it is for feeling.
No. The only insect that can do that is the Spiny leaf insect. (I'm pretty sure but other stick insects might be able to do so too.)
Well, Garfield fat and lazy and he's 32 years old. So probably not
Refrain from being troublesome.
The stick insect is probably still "drying out". The new skin stays soft for quite a while after shedding so the stick insect will often stay very still until its new skin has hardened.
A stick insect is usually between 5 to 7 and a half inches long, depending on the species.ADD:It really does depend on the species. Some are very small; only reaching 5cm or so in length, whereas much larger species can reach 30cm or over.