There are lots of animals that eat seeds, such as birds & Squirrels - Caged Animals such as hamsters, guinea pigs, rats & mice
ponies, chickens, geese, ducks.
Birds, rodents, humans.
All species that eat seeds
A human could.
When the apple has grown, an animal (or human) will eat it. And if it is not a human it will eat the whole thing so that the apple and the seed will enter the digestive system of that animal, the fruit will digest, leaving the seed to be left and then the animal will have a poo somewhere else leaving the seed growing into another apple tree
Yes they do because it is fruit but they do not like the seed in the middle
They eat a lot for a small animal. They have seed and veggies but quite a bit of both depending on the guinea pig.
They can fall off their tree or plant and an animal will eat the date and the seeds will come out of their behind.
After the animals eat them, the seeds and the fruits will be in the stomach. The fruit gets digested but the seed cannot be digested. So when the animal goes and take a dump, the droppings left by the animal will be the fresh soil for the plant. and there goes another generation of another plant. :D
The cow pulls the plow. Without the cow, there would be no agriculture. You do not eat your seed corn. You do not kill and eat the animal that pulls your plow.
The fruit either rots or birds/other animals eat the juicy parts. Then there's the seed and then birds/other animals can carry the seed. The feces of the animals consists of the mango seeds then grows into a plant.
A yew seed is dispersed when it is eaten by an animal.
animal eats the fruit and disperses the seed through waste
Some animals will eat a berry or fruit and walk away from the plant or tree that produced the berry of fruit.. when the animal defecates it would deposit the seed in a new farther area then the tree or pant could have... the animal can also carry the seed on it's fur and drop it off (unknowingly) in a new location ...
Explosive splitting enables the seed to be dispersed only around the parent plant, and not as far as other methods of dispersal, such as animal dispersal, of which the seeds can be dispersed for as many as a few kilometers.