No it can not prepare food as it can not take co2 & trap sunlight.
by using there claws that they carry on both sides of there bodys and serching the bottom for food
A hungry customer purchases a hamburger from a fast food restaurant.
yes they can. Cyanobacteria has both of them and still make their one food.
a balanced plate is when u have a equal ampont of food on both sides and when u put it on scalesit is equale
They just all do what everybody does before war...polish their guns, hunt for food, etc.
It is not usually nesessary to put a cover on food in the microwave oven. Some people cover food to prevent soiling the inside of the oven.
they both have connections. such as the food web is one "item" connecting to another. a food pyramid is going up and as it goes up there are still connections.
I am no expert, but if it still works ok, then it is fine. The rust will not affect the food, but if you want to be extra careful cover the food in a way that will not have an effect on the heating/cooking
They both will get their own food, even when the female is pregnant or carrying joeys around, she will still be very able to get food.
Both sides had terrible food service. Trains that brought the food were often delayed, so food would sometimes arrive rotten stale, or filled with bugs and maggots. Both sides had hardtack, a cracker apparently so bad, soldiers renamed them: Worm Castles and Sheet Iron Crackers. Soldiers had to boil these crackers to soften them enough to eat. Both sides also had pork. The Union, however, got nicer things because they had the industrial economy on their side. The soldiers sometimes received coffee and sugar. The Confederates, however, didn't get any of those things. When the food was delayed or too covered in bugs, the soldier's stole from nearby gardens. When they couldn't do that, they ate squirrels.
It is a small piece of wood proabably about 2mm thick with pointed ends on both sides that people use to get food out of their teeth.
There was constant movement on both the Union and Confederate sides in the Overland campaign. As a consequence of this, wagons with food supplies could not always keep up with the armies they had to feed. The result was that undernourishment was a battle fatigue problem.