Ants.
It is the leaves. The leaves get water and make food from that. MConnor
leaves
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the leaves
Leaves
They don't actually eat the leaves - because they cannot digest the cellulose. Instead - they take the pieces of leaf back to their 'nest' - and use them to grow fungus on them. They then eat the fungus.
Leaves are the part of the tree that makes food through the process of photosynthesis. They contain chlorophyll, a green pigment that captures sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into glucose, which is the tree's food source.
Parasol ants use leaves to cultivate a fungus that serves as their primary food source. The ants cut leaves, bring them back to their colony, chew them into a paste, and then feed this paste to their fungal garden. The fungus breaks down the leaf material and converts it into a nutrient-rich substrate that the ants can digest.
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Giraffe.
Leaf cutter ants live in subterranean colonies, where they have chambers that contain their fungus gardens. They forage above ground to cut leaves to bring back to the colony to cultivate more fungus. These ants are native to Central and South America but there are some species that can be found as far North as Texas in the United States.
There are invertebrate flies, mites, collembolans, polychaetes, & nematodes that rely on fungus as a food source.