partridges drink water and eat insects, mud, wild bird food, tiny stones so they can digest their food because they don't have teeth to chew. also grass and leaves
While it is tempting to say that artificial insects would live there, actually any kind of insect could nest in artificial grass. They can't eat it, but they could live there.
it eats insects ofany kind,and may eat grass when its sick
ants are mighty workers for them and grass hoppers and matisse and butterflies is flowers count man this is hard just go watch out your window and stare
The types of crickets that eat grass are field crickets and house crickets. Crickets also eat leafy vegetables, small insects, and fungi.
bear tobacco chew
they eat seed from grass and hay and insects and other seeds acorns corn and berries
It isn't straw we chew, it's grass. Straw is made from the stems of wheat, oats, or barley that's been cut and baled to provide bedding for animals after the grains have been harvested. What you see farmers chewing is grass--tall, tasseled prairie grass--which is liable to be growing in yards and pastures out in the country. There isn't a specific reason why we chew it. We just do. It's kind of like chewing gum. Many tall prairie grasses have a sweet, refreshing taste--one of the kind I like to chew, called big blue stem, actually tastes a bit like watermelon. So if you're working outside and it's hot out and you don't have any gum, a long piece of grass not only gives you something sweet to chew on but it can also (ever so slightly) re-hydrate you. In the very least, it breaks the monotony of farm work.
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Cows have usually molar teeth because they eat grass, and to eat gras you need to chew it hard so you can digest it. This is what molar teeth exactly can be used for
insects.
well i think arthropods are little insects such as the lady bugs , crabs , lobsters , grass hoppers , and those kind of things:)