Ladybugs like and can eat all kinds of pollen, although not all kinds are healthy for them.
Pollen and sugar grains are the kinds of powder that ladybugs eat with water. Pollen is the main food source for herbivorous ladybug species, not for aphid-, mealybug-eating carnivorous species. Crushed pollen and fine sugar nevertheless serve as supplements for ladybugs that overwinter indoors or that receive food from garden-loving families.
no but some kinds of ladybugs do
Ladybugs live on manly pollen, possibly grass and leaves and also small insects like- aphids and green-flies, they also drink water.
no it drinks pollen from flowers
None. Ladybugs are carnivorous
there are about 5000 kinds of ladybugs in the world and their are 400 in the U.S.
Herbivorous species are the kinds of ladybugs that eat grasses and leaves. Plant-eating ladybugs eat fungi, honeydew, nectar, nutrient-rich plant xylem, pollen grains, and sugar-rich phloem. Members of the Epilachninae ladybug subfamily also may prey upon the leaves of such edible crops as beans, grains, and potatoes, though rarely of a serious nature or to excess.
Arthropod-rich, vegetated habitats that offer shaded and sunlit moisture, spring and summer temperatures, and warm shelter are the kinds of environments that ladybugs like. The insects in question (Coccinellidae family) need plants that attract such food sources as aphids, mealybugs and thrips for the carnivorous genera and pollen for the herbivorous species. The above-mentioned habitat supports ladybug life cycles and natural histories so that adults breed and feed, eggs hatch, and immature and mature stages sustain the endless cycle of egg-layers and their eggs.
firefly's eat pollen on different kinds of flowers.
No. Gardeners like ladybugs because they eat aphids.
No. Ladybugs (Ladybirds) eat aphids.
Some ladybugs like oak trees, maple trees, and bannana trees.