Monarch caterpillars eat lots and lots of milkweed plants but I believe they are poisons to us. They eat lots! You just buy them a whole pant and let them eat up as much as they want!
Give it a lot of food and let eat as much as needed
None, they get enough moisture fro the plants that they consume.
The pupa stage is the stage of the caterpillar. The monarch caterpillars colours are black, white and yellow. You would find them on milkweed, which is not much of a weed. So once again, the word pupa means caterpillar. :)
The weight of an average caterpillar can vary depending on the species, but most caterpillars weigh only a few grams. They are typically lightweight due to their small size and the fact that they primarily feed on plant materials in their larval stage.
Every kind of caterpillar has different food requirements. If you have found a caterpillar on a plant in the wild you should feed it the leaves of the plant you found it on. If you did not find it in the wild then please ask the person you got it from what it eats. It is not true that you should only feed a caterpillar small amounts of food. Consider that in the wild a caterpillar lives on a plant many times its size - a huge banquet! However you might not want to pick large amounts of the plant because they will wilt after a short time and then you will need to pick more. For the plant's good you might want to give the caterpillar smaller amounts more frequently so you waste less. But you should give the caterpillar as much as it will eat.
It's the host plant they evolved for their caterpillars to feed on, really--milkweed. That's pretty much the main reason why they live where they do.
Female wasps lay eggs after mating with male wasps. The eggs are typically laid inside a host organism, such as a caterpillar or spider, where they develop into larvae. The larvae then feed on the host organism until they are ready to pupate and emerge as adult wasps.
Not so much what you won't have, rather what you willhave: a lot more garden pests. Wasps are a gardener's friend because they capture a lot of pest insects to feed to their larvae.
as much as he desires.
Some birds and other animals find the toxins in a Monarch caterpillar or butterfly extremely distateful. They can become sick after eating a Monarch buterfly. Other birds quite happily eat Monarch caterpillars and butterflies. It simply depends upon the species of bird!
it eats your mom
Eggs are elongate, white, gently curved, and have a soft membranous shell. In social species, eggs are not laid with any food as workers begin to feed larvae as soon as they hatch. In solitary species, eggs are laid upon or near a food source enclosed in a cell with the larvae