no. you would gain foot flexibility like those agent orange babies missing arms. or you could just rub you face in it. opening cans would suck.
No, sharks are a key part of the food chain, without them other species would overpopulate and starve themselves to death.
It can digest roughage that any other animal (except other ruminants like sheep and bison) would simply starve to death on.
Depends on the animal. Some would be hunted and eaten, some would hunt and eat other animals, and the rest would starve to death or become roadkill (and would then be eaten by scavengers).
Plants would starve and die then either we would run out of oxygen or we'd starve and so would animals
There are other enviro friendly alternatives.
The deer would not have enough food and start to starve to death which would cause the population to decrease locally. They may migrate toward other areas not as impacted by the drought, or spread out more.
A domestic ferret does not have instincts to find food in the wild, they would starve to death. There are two other ferrets - European polecat ferret and black footed ferret. rephrase your question if your asking about one of them
They likely will not 'starve to death', other organ systems will begin to fail first. A person who is actively dying cannot expend the energy to even digest the food, so feeding an actively dying person could prove to be painful and even prolong suffering.
We have genetically modified foods for centuries by selective cross breeding plants. With out this and other modern methods of farming perhaps a billion people now existing on a substance diet would starve to death.
Yes. Otherwise they would starve, just like all other humans.
yes they would, but only if they had to. say, if they were about to starve to death they would eat these shrubs to keep them full until they find better food to eat. <><><> On the other hand, deer will happily devour many shrubs and flowers right to the ground, and wait impatiently for you to plant more.
Data on the exact number of people who starve to death in Zimbabwe can be difficult to determine accurately due to various factors. However, the UN estimates that millions of people in Zimbabwe are food insecure and face hunger. The situation is exacerbated by economic challenges, climate change, and other issues.