There are several types of bookworm or insects which eat through books. Actual book-borers are uncommon. Both the larvae of the death watch beetle(Xestobium rufovillosum) and the common furniture beetle (Anobium punctatum) will tunnel through wood and paper if it is nearby the wood. A major book-feeding insect is the booklouse (or book louse). A tiny (under 1 mm), soft-bodied wingless psocoptera (usually Trogium pulsatorium), that actually feeds on moulds (molds) and other organic matter found in ill-maintained works, although they will also attack bindings and other parts. It is not actually a true louse. Many other insects, like thesilerfish (Lepisma saccharina) or cockroach (various Blattodea), will consume these molds and also degraded paper or the starch-based binding pastes - warmth and moisture or high humidity are prerequisites, so damage is more common in the tropics. Modern glues and paper are less attractive to insects.
Silver fish
Silverfish
Animals make new homes because the old ones might get a little to small. Or they are improving their old homes.
Elephants don't make homes, they shelter under big trees.
Insects make their nests out of different materials - each insect species tends to make the same sort of nest, but across species the nests are all different
Carnivorous plants - such as the Venus Fly-trap, Pitcher and Sundew - make their food from dissolving the bodies of the insects that are trapped. The plant excretes enzymes to break-down the tissues of the insects, and the plant absorbs the nutrients.
death watch beetle
the magnetic crustaceanal part of the sand is the bit that animals use to make homes namely sand bugs and insects
Earth dragons tend to be very large, wingless species that make their homes underground or in mountains. Their scales are very rough and colored like rocks, so when completely still, they are totally undetectable, even if you touch them.
Toads eat insects and slugs. A single toad could eat 10,000 insects in a summer. This is why many gardeners make toad homes in their flower beds.http://www.gardeningknowhow.com/garden-how-to/beneficial/how-to-attract-toads.htm
The canopy is formed by the branches overhead. It's the umbrella layer of the rain forest. The canopy is loaded with life. Birds, monkeys . . . and yes, more insects . . . make their homes there.
Booklice are small insects that can infest books and make holes in paper and bindings. They feed on mold and mildew found in books and can cause damage if left untreated.
bees
A lifting body paper airplane would not have wings, although I am not sure the instructions of any are available online.
They don't make their homes, they live in anemones.
Elks make their homes out of Elk Home Making Kits
Animals make new homes because the old ones might get a little to small. Or they are improving their old homes.
Yes, some insects in the desert make noise: cicadas, crickets, for example.
There are many places where you can go and find blue prints to help make this move easier, There are also many books on feung-shui I hope this helped to make it a little easier.