Absolutely not. They may eat insects and even, occasionally, tiny mammals and reptiles, but never sugar gliders.
I don't think so...squirrels don't eat peach, you know. But it could be possible for them to be demaging the peaches.
Yes they are legal but sugar gliders are not.
Flying-Squirrel-like Marsupial
Squirrel gliders primarily feed on insects, nectar, pollen, and tree sap. However, they might occasionally consume small vertebrates like lizards or bird eggs if the opportunity arises, but this is not a significant part of their diet.
The native predators of the squirrel glider are owls, kookaburras and snakes. Quolls also prey on squirrel gliders. Since the time European settlement began in Australia, enemies of the squirrel glider have increased to include instroduced foxes, cats and dogs. People are a threat as they cut down the gliders' habitat.
Lorikeets and squirrel gliders are most likely to eat the nectar of eucalypt trees in the box ironbark bushland.
Squirrel gliders, which are small, gliding marsupials in the possum family, are not endangered, even though there are several endangered populations through their habitat along the east coast. Their total population is not known.
Sugar gliders should not eat chicken.
No blackbirds would not eat a squirrel.
No, cherry trees are not safe for gliders.
No. In their native habitat, sugar gliders do eat small insects, but ants are not among their normal diet.