In don't know if it's desirable, but my dogs have been eating these for several years as they fall off the trees in my yard...as do the neighborhood squirrels. I try to discourage it however because my one dog swallows them whole and then throws up the pits later. Ugh.
Yes, the plant produces a lot of seed (nuts) and they can sicken a dog. They also can harm the fruit bats which like to feed on it.
yes
Mountain berries
The somewhat "poisonous" berries fall out of the tree. Then they are either carried by the wind to somewhere else or are moved by another animal.
Don't let your dog eat ANY berries especially wild ones!
Holly trees tend to be dioecious. That means that female and male flowers tend to be on different trees. They're insect-pollinated, particularly by bees. If they're not within range of each other, then there'll be no berries. The berries are ka drupes.
Holly trees and bushes are used for landscaping where you might want a perennial, broadleaf evergreen with red berries in the fall. Hollywood, of course, is useful for housing goofball actors.
Well, first off, strawberries don't come from trees. They come from low-to-the-ground plants. Wild strawberry plants have tiny berries, while human-bred plants can have huge berries, and be quite messy if those berries start to rot.
They eat the berries in the fall when they are ripe. Not all birds eat these berries, so can also depend on fall migration.
Deciduous trees fall in the Fall. The trees lose their color and lose their leaves. That's why there are many trees that are bare in the Fall.
Berries.
Poisonous gases will not make babies fall from the sky
Autumn which is also called "fall" because the leaves fall from the trees.
bear