You can get all sorts of things from plant. you can get things such as leaves, trunk, twig , etc..
Twig catfish are omnivores. Go to catfish info . blogspot . com and click ctrl + f and type twig and it will pop up.
reticulate
They are grown together, just like humans with their arms.
TWIG
They shouldn't. Whorled leaves would all have their petioles attached at the same level on the branch. Although oak leaves are called "alternate," implying that every other leaf petiole is attached on the opposite side of the twig or branch from the one above, it's not quite that simple. Oak leaves generally are arranged so they attach at one of five locations if the twig or branch is viewed end-on. From a distance this arrangement can appear whorled, but if you look closely from the side you'll see that the attachment points for the leaf petioles are at different levels along the twig (this becomes clearer away from the growing tip).
A tig looks brown and skinny and birds usually use it to build a nest a twig looks like a small stick, it might have leaves
Yes they can,they could eat apples, but not leaves.(in cause of death)
Use anything you have to survive. leaves=pillow branches=firewood big twig=hunting
You can get all sorts of things from plant. you can get things such as leaves, trunk, twig , etc..
The smallest, ending part of a branch to a hickory tree [Carya spp] and a means by which the tree may be identified in winter are what a hickory twig is. When the tree is leafed out, the twig has leaves growing out of alternating leaf buds up and down its sides. It's also the location of the tree's flower and fruit.
70% tree leaves, shrub leaves, twig ends 19% forbs 11% grasses 3% agrecultural crops
It depends. If the leaf is on a really small, thin piece of wood that extends from a tree that is less than an inch thick, the leaf is on a twig. If it is on a piece of wood extending from a tree that is thicker than an inch, it is considered to be on a branch.
Phloem
Yes
Tree. The branch is the hand, the tree is the body, the bark is the skin.
One leaf attached to a stem.