Katydids are generally herbivores. They eat flower petals, stems, fruit, leaves and pollen. A few species of katydids will eat other insects.
yes but only when there dead
Yes, katydids eat strawberries.Specifically, most katydids follow a diet of plant parts: bark, flowers, fruit, leaves, and seeds. Some may add occasional or periodic preying upon caterpillars, eggs, frogs and snails. Others may go so far as to cannibalize other katydids or to chase down small mice and snakes.
they are green and can be blue or a tuquis
No, katydids are not venomous. They are herbivorous insects that primarily feed on leaves, flowers, and other plant material. They do not possess venom or use it for defense or hunting.
In the wild Katydids will normally eat the leaves from willow, rosewood and citrus trees. They are mostly herbivorous, so will consume most foliage, including flower petals, stems, fruit from trees, crops, and even weeds. They may also eat nectar and pollen at times too. Some katydids have been known to prey on other insects, although this isn't common.
yes infact they eat pimpels and zits
they get the juices from the plants that they eat
A few types of caterpillar eat nettle leaves but most caterpillars do not.
Many animals, including insects and mammals, eat leaves. People eat leaves, such as lettuce, parsley, and spinach leaves.
Most types of katydids are nocturnal in nature while a few of them are active during the day. They are not considered as social creatures because they do not live in groups. They do not usually get spotted by predators that often because of their leaf-like appearance making it easy for them to camouflage among the leaves.
Seagulls will eat about anything