It has a handy-dandy false nose and moustache for just such occasions.
A black alder tree is a producer because it creates its own food through photosynthesis. It is not a consumer or decomposer.
No, an alder tree is not a conifer. While conifers are gymnosperms and are part of the Division Coniferophyta, alder trees are, in fact, angiosperms, otherwise known as Division Anthophyta.
The Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) is a conifer tree that produces large, distinctive cones similar to alder cones. It is a coniferous tree but is not deciduous, unlike alder trees. The cones of the Douglas fir are much larger than those of alder trees.
The animal that can adapt to any environment is the cockroach.
Black alder trees can reproduce through seed production and dispersal. Female catkins containing seeds develop on the tree, which are then dispersed by wind or water. The seeds can germinate in moist soil and grow into new trees.
Like all trees, they adapt to the specific environment to thrive where they are planted.
A black alder is a variety of tree, Alnus glutinosa, of many practical uses, or the wood which grows on this tree.
No, the alder is not coniferous. It belong to the birch family Betulaceae.
They are Alder Flea Beetles.
An alder is any of a variety of species of tree or shrub of the genus Alnus, belonging to the birch family.
This is the Alder Flea Beetle. You can see this on the wensite below -
I don't think so, since alder is a tree. If you meant elder you could have older.
A black alder tree is a producer because it creates its own food through photosynthesis. It is not a consumer or decomposer.
The Alder is the state tree of Nagaland, Republic of India.
alder
an alder tree
they adapt in their own ways... such as if the plant or tree has a large trunk/stem then it will store water ready for the dry months