No large animals that I am aware of eat the saguaro. The prickly pear cactus is usually the choice for many animals.
Yes, a saguaro cactus has roots.
they choose this because the saguaro cactus was a famous cactus
One role that the Gila woodpecker [Melanerpes uropygialis] plays for the saguaro cactus [Carnegiea gigantea] is as pollinator. It's one of the major predators of the saguaro's large, edible, dark plum like fruits. In eating the fruit, it eliminates the seeds by which the saguaro naturally reproduces.Another role is as predator. In a way, it doesn't matter how many saguaro fruits that that woodpecker eats. What's important is the elimination of the digested seeds. It's a natural way of insuring perpetuation of the saguaro species.But the woodpecker affects another of the cactus' body parts other than the fruit. The woodpecker is known to drill holes into the stem, for nest building. The drilling and the nesting can be a problem, depending upon the extent of the damage.
The largest saguaro cactus is located in Arizona, USA.
The saguaro cactus blossom is the representative flower of the state of Arizona.
No, the saguaro is a cactus that lives in a desert.
It looks like you are asking about the saguaro cactus. There is no type of cactus with a name that is any closer to "saroya".
The range of the saguaro cactus is primarily in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona, California, and Mexico.
The saguaro is a cactus of the Sonoran Desert primarily.
Yes, the saguaro is a vascular plant.
Arizona uses the Saguaro cactus flower as the state's flower .
Because the roots of the saguaro cactus are just below the surface.