"animals" is very vague. If It's a deer, sure maybe. If you're talking about killer whales, no.
Deer eat twigs, grass, shoots, leaves, flowers but not lichens.
Yes they do.
Yes they do but rarely.
yes they eat it for nutrients
They survive on presence of pollutants, more the pollutant more the lichen and vice versa.
A lichen is an organism and i know this because it can eat, drink, and reproduce.
Ferns are eaten by deer.
Yes deer are animals and yes they eat. However, they eat plants (- they ARE herbivores) not animals (- they ARE NOT carnivores).
I have an authoritative book on owls that claims that "Roe Deer" (a very small deer in Europe) have been eaten by a Great Horned Owl (or their version of that owl). It didn't say whether it was a juvenile or injured deer. Many owls swallow prey whole and regurgitate a pellet later, but they are quite happy to eat the traditional way... tear the animal apart w/ the beak and eat just the flesh.
They survive on presence of pollutants, more the pollutant more the lichen and vice versa.
They eat grasses, mosses, and mostly lichen. LEMMINGS
Lichen eat away at rocks.
A lichen is an organism and i know this because it can eat, drink, and reproduce.
A lichen is an organism and i know this because it can eat, drink, and reproduce.
No
No. Ladybirds mostly eat aphids.
Lichen is found in the Boreal Forest, also called the Taiga, where deer, elk, mountain goats, slugs and snails, and many insects eat lichens.
Woodland caribou eat a variety of vascular plants during the summer. In the winter, they eat lichens, both terrestrial and arboreal lichens.
Heather and lichen.
plants, grasses, moss, and lichen
They eat grass, tree bark, tundra plants such as lichen and moss.