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- He is anthropomorphic - he has the ability to talk (with a South London accent) and wears smaller versions of human clothes (including his trademark red beret and red and white patterned neckerchief) and is obsessed with mashed potato, which he likes to play with as well as eat.
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Aug 27, 2019 · What do badgers eat? The staple food of badgers is usually earthworms which generally make up around 80% of their diet. They can eat several hundred worms each night. But being omnivorous, they will eat almost anything, from flesh and fruit to bulbs and birds' eggs.
Common name: European badger. Scientific name: Meles meles. Main signs: Scraped out bits of lawn or snuffle holes, latrines, partially eaten bulbs, vegetables and fruit, digging under fences or broken fence. Plants affected: Lawn, flower beds, fruits, vegetables. Most active: Badgers are nocturnal.
We often advise giving the badgers an occasional helping hand (in the winter and spring) with food, like wet cat-food or wet dog-food, soft-boiled potatoes, very wet pasta, plain nuts (no salt and no chocolate), moist soft-boiled rice, windfall fruit and soft mushrooms - especially if the badgers are starting to look a little thin or if there ...
They are not fussy eaters, and some people will actually give badgers a helping hand by feeding them soft-boiled potatoes and food scraps or kitchen leftovers. Some badgers seem to have a predilection for eating daffodil and crocus bulbs.
What do badgers eat? Badgers are omnivores, which means they will eat a wide range of food. Around 80% of a badger’s diet is made up of earthworms – they can eat hundreds of them in a single night – but they also eat slugs and other invertebrates.
Badger diet and foraging behaviour. Badgers eat an omnivorous diet. 1 Badgers have been described as preferential earthworm feeders in a landmark study across six areas of Scotland. 2. Earthworms, insects and grubs make up 80% of badgers’ food in the UK.
In some areas, badgers may dig out and eat the contents of wasp and bee nests, including the larvae, pupae, honey and honeycomb. They will eat carrion and those in urban areas are known to scavenge food from bins and gardens and may occasionally break into poultry houses or take other small domestic animals, but such instances are considered rare.