no birds eat stink bugs because well they stink.
yes ladybugs do eat stink bugs because they are small bugs and it is easy for ladybugs to eat them.
I just threw two stink bugs out in the snow and watched 2 bluebirds fly off the bird feeder and go after each of them. Not only do they eat them but they appear partial to like them.
yes
stink bugs are good to keep they eat other insects and intruders.
no they dont
From: Est-ut-sic : I have observed Black Widow Spiders (Latrodectus hesperas) both in the wild and 2 in captivity that absolutely loved sucking stink bugs dry. For the 2 in captivity it appeared to be their favorite.
Yes, wolf spiders are known to feed on stink bugs. Stink bugs are part of their diet as they are opportunistic predators that feed on a variety of insects. Wolf spiders use their speed and agility to capture and eat stink bugs along with other prey items.
pineapple
stink bugs suck juice out of leafs and stinky plants they also eat lady bugs and other poisonous insects to birds and other animalsAdult stink bugs mostly feed on sap from smelly plants like cabbage. They eat ladybugs and other bugs that are poisonous to birds or mammals that try to eat them.
no thay do not
Parasitic wasps, other predatory stink bugs, praying mantids, garden spiders and birds, assassin bugs, and ants are predators of stink bugs. These predators get beyond the foul smell and taste of stink bugs. They can be counted on to regard stink bugs as acceptable food sources.Specifically, parasitic wasps (of the Apocrita suborder of the Hymenoptera order) lay their eggs and feed off stink bugs. Such colonizing and parasitizing ultimately will kill the stink bug. The problem lies in the ability of the stink bug to do damage while it dies a slow, unpleasant death.Predatory stink bugs include the spined soldier bug (Podisus maculiventris) and the two spotted stink bug (Perillus bioculatus). They kill and feed on fellow, non predatory stink bugs. The term "non predatory" simply means that such stink bugs tend to look to plants as their main food sources.Praying mantids (of the family Mantidae), garden birds such as the house wren (Troglodytes aedon) and the Northern flicker (Colaptes auratus), assassin bugs (of the Reduviidae family), and ants (of the Formicidaefamily) are all dependable feeders of many stink bugs. But as is the case with other stink bug predators, they are not showing themselves to be enthusiastic about eating the non native brown marmorated stink bug (Halyomorpha halys).The brown marmorated stink bug nevertheless is vulnerable to two viruses. It also is vulnerable to parasitic waspsthat are not native to the United States of America. So researchers and scientists are studying the possibility of introducing into the United States of America these effective biological controls of China and Japan.