Plant juices and seeds are what the green stink bug (Acrosternum hilare or Chinavia hilaris) eat.
Specifically, the green stink bug has needle-like, piercing, sucking mouthparts. It therefore is easy for the bug to remove the juices from field, garden, and orchard plants. It also is no problem for the bug to feed on seeds, particularly of such edibles as beans, corn, eggplant, and peas. The bug will consider as additional food sources leaves and stems of trees, particularly in citrus gardens and orchards.
Green stink bug was created in 1832.
it depends on the stink bug, there's lots of different kinds. for instance there is green stink bugs, also brown marmorted stink bugs. which I have a brown marmorted stink bug as a pet
Yes because the bug has a kind of skin that makes the bug smell so bad. So that the bird or anyhting else that is going to eat it. not eat it!
you don't eat it in the start :|
you cant, first kick yellow stink bug nest then kick blue and you get green
The word for stink bug in Spanish is chinche. The word for stink bug in Italian cimice. The word for stink bug is bug puanteur.
They eat plants so you can lure them out with tasty plants or take a piece of paper and pick them up with it or if your talking about a pet stink bug feed them plants
NO
you can only smell a stink bug if you squish it.
Rice stink bug was created in 1775.
Plant juices and seeds are what the green stink bug (Acrosternum hilare or Chinavia hilaris) eat.Specifically, the green stink bug has needle-like, piercing, sucking mouthparts. It therefore is easy for the bug to remove the juices from field, garden, and orchard plants. It also is no problem for the bug to feed on seeds, particularly of such edibles as beans, corn, eggplant, and peas. The bug will consider as additional food sources leaves and stems of trees, particularly in citrus gardens and orchards.
No. Mine eat the off my walls all the time.