The city, volunteers, the state, or the country.
Whoever cares, most likely the owner of the property, or someone he hires to do it.
yes, ocelots den up under fallen trees, or even in trees
Yes. There was a small tornado formation in 2005 that uprooted up a few trees and damaged a roof.
Debris, wood and brick from houses, people, trees, water. Anything that the tornado is strong enough to carry.
The person whose ground they land on.
The speed at which a tornado can break a tree depends on the intensity of the tornado. Tornado winds can reach speeds of over 300 mph, easily snapping trees at their trunk or uprooting them. Strong tornadoes can cause extensive damage to trees within seconds.
Jaguars usually den up in thickets, around fallen large trees, or in trees. They are good climbers.
Uncle Cleans Up was created in 1965.
Yes. Tornadoes very often rip up vegetation. Even a relatively weak tornado can topple hundreds of trees if it goes through a wooded area.
AchE Acetylcholinesterase. It cleans up Ach Acetylcholine
It depends on the strength of the tornado. Weak tornadoes will lift up light objects such as small tree branches. Strong tornadoes have been known to lift up cars, trees, roofs, barns, and sometimes people and animals. Violent tornadoes have been known to lift up and throw heavy construction equipment, well constructed houses, and sometimes larger structures.
Both they eat fallen fruits, washed up fish, and climb trees to eat bugs.