Yes
the sun comes first and then the fruit and then the pygmy marmoset comes then the snake and then the Bactria
Pygmy marmosets eat sap and gum from trees, which are located within their territories. They use their claws to drill a hole into the tree. The pygmy marmosets wait for the sap to ooze out of the hole they created. They immediately suck the sap form the hole. Sap is the most important food in their diet, without it they would not survive in the wild. Pygmy marmosetsare gumnivors. Pygmy marmosets also eat spiders, butterflies, frogs, lizards, snails, small, juicy buds, flowers and grasshoppers. Grasshoppers are pygmy marmosets' favorite food. To catch one a pygmy marmoset may even venture down to the ground. Something they rarely do. When catching butterflies, the pygmies go and eat sap. The sap attracts the butterflies, which are then easy to catch.
Gorillas are tropical animals. There are only two seasons in the tropics and they are the wet and the dry. It never gets really cold or really hot so the Gorillas just carry on as normal foraging for their food 12 months of the year.
skunks do not store food for winter
they store their food
Pygmy marmosets eat sap and gum from trees, which are located within their territories. Sap is the most important food in their diet, without it they would not survive in the wild. They also eat spiders, butterflies, frogs, lizards, snails, small juicy buds, flowers and grasshoppers (which are their favorite food). Pygmy marmosets drink fresh water all of the time, mostly found in or on leaves or flowers. The most important vitamin they need is A/D3 which they get from the sun or the plants they eat. When fed in captivity, they eat peas, cauliflower, baby cereal, boiled eggs, yogurt, meat, fish and rice.
they get food during spring and summer and store it for winter.
ants. they store food before winter, because they'd die in the winter if they go out. Also they store food to survive for winter.
No... they digest what they've eaten. They do not store food for winter.
== == As with any species, if the mountain pygmy possum cannot eat, it will starve. This is becoming an increased possibility as, with the warming climates, the pygmy possums are coming out of hibernation up to a month before the bogong moths, (their preferred food) arrive after winter. It may be that the pygmy possum may learn to adapt, out of sheer desperation, but whether another food source can provide its unique dietary requirements is unknown. The mountain pygmy possum faces the very real possibility of extinction.
Pygmy marmosets primarily inhabit the canopy layer of the rainforest, which is the uppermost layer of the forest where the tree branches meet sunlight. They are well adapted to life in the treetops, using their small size and agility to move among the branches in search of food.
to store them for food.