They will eat them, but it's not a good idea to feed your bearded dragon anything you catch from outside. This is due to pesticides and parasites that may be present in the body of the insect you caught that will make your bearded dragon ill.
Crickets from the pet store are the best insect to feed your bearded dragon. It may seem expensive to feed crickets, but it's still a lot cheaper than a vet bill.
Yes, they do eat worms such as meal worms, wax worms, and superworms.
Wax moths primarily feed on beeswax, honey, and pollen found in beehives. They are known to cause damage by tunneling through combs and consuming wax and brood.
Bearded Dragons are omnivores - requiring a diet of insects and plants-based food. Juveniles tend to eat smaller insects such as crickets. Adults will eat larger insects such as locusts, superworms, wax-worms and grasshoppers. Bearded dragons also eat increasing amounts of plant based food as they grow... Adults should have a diet consisting of more than 60% plant matter - the most important of which is leafy greens.
Yes, wax worms are the caterpillar larvae of wax moths. They are commonly used as fishing bait and as food for pet reptiles.
DO NOT FEED THEM MAGGOTS. not meaning to be harsh, but maggots hold lots of bacteria, even if they are bred. they eat dead or rotten animals, or plants, but whatever they eat, your beardie eats, and your beardie could get very sick
They're insectivores so they eat wax worms, meal worms, super worms, flies, moths, and grasshoppers.
Adult Crickets, Locusts, Mealworms, Superworms, Zoophobias, Waxworms, Wax Moths, or Pinky Mice
Wax worms will turn into moths. They go through a life cycle that includes egg, larva (the wax worm stage), pupa, and adult moth.
Waxworms are the caterpillar larvae of wax moths, which belong to the snout moth family (Pyralidae).
you can.. but why would you want to eat wax ?
Many things actually. Humans do. Bears do. There are many insects that do including small hive beetles, wax moths, and other bees (called robbing).
Alan Tremblay has written: 'Controlling wax moths in honeycombs' -- subject(s): Control, Pyralidae, Honeycombs, Greater wax moth