It depends on the species of the weeds. A general rule of thumb is yes, they evolved in the wild and so will usually know what they can eat (if it occurs in nature/their natural habitat)
The Weedy Sea Dragons eat weeds and Dicks
The Weedy Sea Dragons eat weeds and Dicks
using the weeds as a hiding place, the dragons breath fire to incinerate the plants as they move. This also kills anything in their path, which they can then eat.
By eating unwanted weeds and fertilising with their manure.
Yes, goats eat weeds. They normally eat grass, but they cannot tell the difference between a weed and a piece of grass so they end up eating weeds.
Elk help the Yellowstone by eating the grass and weeds also overgrown plants.
Some fish are adapted to eat aquatic plants. That's just what they eat.
in pre-colonial times probably it probably consisted of eating weeds hunting kangaroo and playing the digerydoo (hey that rymes)
Goats affect the environment in several good ways. One way they affect the environment is by eating all the weeds, undergrowth, etc. If the goats didn't eat the excess weeds, then machines would be used and emit harmful pollution.
Mowing, pruning, or weed-eating and rainfall-watering are ways to control and irrigate weeds. Weeds may be defined as a plant whose benefit is criticized, forgotten, or unknown and whose place in the landscape secured by aggressive root-spreading and seed-dispersing is not what the property occupant has in mind. Their aggressive and invasive tendencies tend to respond to regular mowing or weed-eating and severe pruning as well as to schedules of watering needs met only by rainfall or rainwater barrels.
The collective nouns are a clump of weeds or a patch of weeds.
Even weeds are lplants and many weeds have flowers so flower are both plants and weeds. flowers you dont want growing where they are are weeds. as are plants.