No, mealworms do not eat cacti and cacti do not occur naturally in the Sahara. Cacti are natives to American deserts.
Mealworms do not eat cacti.
people leopards lions (although these will only eat the small or the young ones,] jackals and hyenas.
The desert tortoise, javelina and deer will eat prickly pear cacti.
other animals
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In the desert, animals like desert tortoises, rabbits, and insects eat cacti. This impacts the ecosystem by controlling cacti population growth and providing food for other animals in the food chain.
In the United States, javelina and deer will eat prickly pear cacti. Some insects and a few rodents as well as the desert tortoise may dine on cacti.I do not know of any animals that eat cacti, on account of their spines, however, some bats, bees, and probably butterflies eat cactus nectar, and various animals may eat their fruit. Humans, however, do eat edible cacti, because they can cut off the spines. An example of an edible cacti is the prickly pear cactus.Deer and rabbits eat the cactus flowerbuds...
No, Rhinos need savanna grass to eat and the Sahara desert does not have enough for them. However before the Sahara region became a desert (10's of thousands of years ago), there is evidence that Rhinos were indigenous to the area.
Camel
they eat in a cetian way they eat what is at the bottom of the food chain
foxes eat snakes (foxes are omnivores)
It is the overtake deviocity of chicken.The mild greatness is under-taked as a unforgiving experience thou overlasting everthing.