Several animals eat pinecones, primarily birds and small mammals. Squirrels and crossbills are known for their ability to extract seeds from the cones, while woodpeckers may also peck at them to access the seeds. Some larger animals, like bears, may consume pinecones when other food sources are scarce. Additionally, certain insects and larvae may feed on the cones as well.
My answer. my food chain is one we learned in science class. Mine is...-conifers -crossbill eats seeds from the pinecones-hawks eat crossbill-fungi eats hawk's dead body
No. A gerbil eats bugs, some roots, and premixed gerbil food. Giving it a pinecone could give it intestinal problems.
Yes and no. The big brown pinecones on the ground that most people consider pinecones are actually female pinecones. The male pinecones are the small pollen structures. Each pollen structure has over a hundred sperm cells, and each pinecone has several egg cells inside it. Not all of them will get fertilized, but in a successful instance, wind or gravity will cause a tiny piece of the pollen, one sperm cell, to fall inside of the female pinecone to fertilize it.
from a tree
Let's represent the number of acorns Lin has as A. Since Lin has 7 fewer pinecones than acorns, we can express the number of pinecones she has as A-7. Given that Lin has 4 pinecones in total, we can set up the equation A-7 + 4 = A. Solving this equation, we find that Lin has 11 acorns.
Yes
No; pinecones are the seepods of coniferous (evergreen) trees.
A bushel is a unit of measurement for volume, equivalent to approximately 8 gallons or 35.2 liters. When it comes to pinecones, the actual number that fits in a bushel can vary widely depending on the size and type of pinecones, but on average, a bushel can hold anywhere from 50 to 100 pinecones. This variability is due to the differences in size and density of the cones.
The plural form is pinecones.
pinecones
On fir trees !
Only pinecones