A stick insect typically consumes a small amount of food relative to its size, usually around 1-2 leaves per day. Their diet mainly consists of various types of foliage, with some species preferring specific plants. The exact quantity can vary depending on the species, age, and environmental conditions. Generally, they eat enough to support their growth and energy needs without overconsuming.
A stick insect doesnt necessarily look like a stick, depending what breed it is. For example a indian stick insect does look like a stick and camaflages itself into leaves and plants e.t.c whereas african stick insects are much more spiky and grow very large
Not much. Humans and birds can eat insects without danger.
This all depends on the type of walking stick insect, its age and size, and other similar factors. On average, a walking stick insect weighs around a quarter of an ounce.
answer is 1 percent b/c the insect gets 10 percent of the plant's energy, and only 10 percent of that 10 percent is available for the bird
every owl dies when it eats to much poisoned food.
Not much unless he eats too much.
If a dog eats half of its portion, it will consume half of the amount of food it normally eats.
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 are roughly I don't know how to describe them in the proper way but they weigh about as much as 10 ml of water. Answered by Sam aged 11
Funny out about it
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.
Sadly, quite easily. A poisoned stick insect will start to lose co-ordination in its legs, lose grip on branches and will eventually become unable to walk and die. This usually takes a few days and sadly, there's not much you can do to save a stick insect that has been poisoned.