pee pee they use its intents to suck pee pee
Taste receptors on a butterfly are located on its feet. These receptors help the butterfly sense and identify potential food sources by allowing them to taste substances when they land on them.
The cabbage butterfly larvae, also known as cabbage worms, feed on plants in the Brassicaceae family such as cabbage, broccoli, and kale. The adult cabbage butterfly feeds on flower nectar, but does not have a specific favorite food as it primarily focuses on mating and laying eggs.
The Baltimore Checkerspot butterfly was named after Lord Baltimore. and became the Maryland state butterfly in 1793
The viceroy butterfly does not eat milkweed, it is a mimic of the monarch butterfly which does eat milkweed. The milkweed makes the monarch butterfly toxic to birds. Once a bird eats its first monarch butterfly it gets so sick that it learns to never try to eat anything that looks like a monarch butterfly ever again. The viceroy butterfly has evolved to mimic the monarch butterfly to avoid being eaten by birds that have previously tried eating a monarch butterfly.
The Blue Morpho butterfly becoming extinct would have a large impact on the environment. The food chain and eco-system would be thrown off. This butterfly is a primary consumer, without this consumer, the producers would soon become overcrowded.
the butterfly's favorite food is nectar.
they do not exist
eating food
small butter-colored stains are butterfly excrement. Butterflies, like all insects, digest their food inside a tube (called the alimentary canal) that runs from mouth to anus. To eat, a butterfly uncoils its long snout (proboscis) and sucks in nectar. The food enters the alimentary canal, gets digested, its nutrients absorbed, and waste excreted.
Do not touch it. This butterfly needs food or is dying
nectar
it gets cold
small butter-colored stains are butterfly excrement. Butterflies, like all insects, digest their food inside a tube (called the alimentary canal) that runs from mouth to anus. To eat, a butterfly uncoils its long snout (proboscis) and sucks in nectar. The food enters the alimentary canal, gets digested, its nutrients absorbed, and waste excreted.
No, a butterfly does not compete for food with a honey bee. There is usually enough nectar for both of them.
proboscis
Step on it or I will.
There tongue