Surprisingly not, butterflies are known to be one of the top predators in the insect world and they are in fact carnivores. Some butterflies are even known to snack on large rats and rabbits.
Yes Bumble bees are herbivores because they eat honey and nectar
herbivorous
The bees need to pollinate plants in order for the plants to produce seeds. Without bees, there wouldn't be any veggies and fruits in the super market. No fruits and no veggies? No herbivores. No herbivores? No meat. No meat? No carnivores. No carnivores AND no herbivores? No omnivores (us).
Type your answer here... bees ladybugs ...
they are hebivores because they "eat" pollen
Yes, very closely. The only difference is that bees are herbivores (feeding on nectar and pollen) and wasps are carnivorous (storing insect flesh in their hives).
An example of mutualism is the relationship between bees and flowers. Bees benefit from feeding on the nectar of flowers, while flowers benefit from the bees transferring pollen for fertilization. Both species gain something valuable from the interaction, promoting their mutual survival and success.
No, grasshoppers do not eat bees. The insects in question (Caelifera suborder) number among the world's herbivores. They prioritize such vegetation as grasses, whose consumption may involve accidental ingestion of tissue and of wastes from arthropod pests.
No, killer bees, which are a type of honey bee, are herbivores. They primarily feed on pollen and nectar from flowers to sustain themselves. They do not actively hunt or consume other animals for food.
No way man! They are herbivores and they make and eat pollen and necter.The bug will maybe eat the bee.
It depends on the animal and it's habitat For an animal which doesn't really have any natural predators or have any prey, then not much to the ecology (such as Giant Pandas or the Dodo), but for animals which keep an eco-system in balance by keeping certain smaller animal population in check, it can be devastating to the environment if they're removed Think about if bees were removed from an environment which had herbivores and carnivores, the bees pollinate flowers, which means that plants grow more freely and more wide-spread, the herbivores eat these plants, and the carnivores eat the herbivores - without the bees the natural food of the herbivores would die out, and thus their population would get smaller, and thus the food supply of the carnivores would get smaller - thus thinning the populations of the herbivores and carnivores, if unchecked the carnivores would kill off the herbivores before their population reduced, and so the entire food chain would be removed Taking that example from the opposite end, if man hunted the carnivores to extinction or endangered list, then the herbivores would increase in population, eating more of the plants, meaning that the bees would have less plants to pollinate, so the bees population would be reduced in size as they die out from lack of food (nectar from the flowers), the herbivores would begin to die out because of lack of food, eventually the entire eco-system would collapse Basically, most natural eco-systems are finely balanced, and removal of one of the elements sets the entire system off kilter, and eventually destroys it
no, my friend, they do not After reading the first response to the question, I have to say that I have watched many wasps attacking and eating bees at the park in Albuquerque where I live. I have been searching for answers about wasps wondering if they have any impact on the diminishing bee population locally or other.