The malachite butterfly eats several different things. The adults mainly eat bat dung, rotting fruit, dead animals, and flower nectar.
Malachite butterflies feed on nectar from flowers, rotting fruits, dead animals, and bat feces. Their eggs are laid on leaves of plants and the young will feed on that plant until they reach adulthood.
The butterfly in Woozworld feeds on nectar from flowers. Nectar provides the butterfly with the energy and nutrients it needs to survive and thrive.
While in the cocoon, a butterfly does not eat anything. It survives on the nutrients stored from when it was a caterpillar. Once the butterfly emerges from the cocoon, it will feed on nectar from flowers to sustain itself.
The butterfly you are referring to is likely the "Malachite butterfly" (Siproeta stelenes). It has large green wings with black edges and white markings that resemble leaves. These butterflies are found in tropical and subtropical regions of the Americas.
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.
Malachite butterflies feed on nectar from flowers, rotting fruits, dead animals, and bat feces. Their eggs are laid on leaves of plants and the young will feed on that plant until they reach adulthood.
Butterfly Fish eat tiny shrimp, worms, and algae.
The monarch butterfly? They eat milkweed.
Malachite is a green mineral. Malachite can be found in Arizona.
how is malachite mined
No, the bird would eat the butterfly
They eat clothing.
Butterfly fish eat tiny shrimp, worms, and algae. They are also known for eating sea anemones.
The butterfly in Woozworld feeds on nectar from flowers. Nectar provides the butterfly with the energy and nutrients it needs to survive and thrive.
frogs!
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no.