They help keep intruders away
no they like the cold
they like to eat booty
cactus and cactus water
The Arizona cactus wren [Campylorhynchus brunneicapillus] looks upon the jumping cactus [Opuntia fulgida] as a preferred nest building site. The cactus has fiercely sharp thorns that easily are embedded in the flesh of predators. So the female and male cactus wren don't have to worry about building their nests too far off the ground in the presence of such a ferocious plant. The nearness to the ground makes it easy for them and their young to feed off of ground dwelling insects, seeds, and small frogs and lizards.
A cactus wren is a species of wren native to the southwestern United States, Latin name Campylorhynchus brunneicapillus.
At deserts like Sahara, Thor etc.
The Cactus wren became Arizona's State bird in 1931.
no!it is not
no...
Cactus wrens and Cholla cactus are symbiotic. The cactus wren builds its nest in the spines of the cactus, providing a safe place for the bird to raise it's young.
A cactus wren is a bird, not a plant. It is neither angiosperm nor gymnosperm.
Oh, dude, the cactus wren is like the MacGyver of the bird world, using its wits to escape tricky situations. It's all about survival of the fittest in the desert, and this wren knows how to outsmart even the sneakiest predators. So yeah, in the story of the cactus wren trapped by the wren's trick, you better believe that little bird found a way out and lived to chirp another day.