Beavers
Some animals spend their entire lives in trees - many birds, for instance, as well as squirrels, raccoons, opossums and several types of insects. These animals are born in trees, live in trees, raise their young in trees and, especially when trees are close together, seldom come down to the ground. For these animals, trees provide shelter from the weather and from enemies. Trees provide food in the form of fruits, nuts, leaves, bark, and roots. Even dead trees provide shelter and food for insects such as termites and beetles. Some animals spend their entire lives in trees - many birds, for instance, as well as squirrels, raccoons, opossums and several types of insects. These animals are born in trees, live in trees, raise their young in trees and, especially when trees are close together, seldom come down to the ground. For these animals, trees provide shelter from the weather and from enemies. Trees provide food in the form of fruits, nuts, leaves, bark, and roots. Even dead trees provide shelter and food for insects such as termites and beetles. Some animals spend their entire lives in trees - many birds, for instance, as well as squirrels, raccoons, opossums and several types of insects. These animals are born in trees, live in trees, raise their young in trees and, especially when trees are close together, seldom come down to the ground. For these animals, trees provide shelter from the weather and from enemies. Trees provide food in the form of fruits, nuts, leaves, bark, and roots. Even dead trees provide shelter and food for insects such as termites and beetles. Some animals spend their entire lives in trees - many birds, for instance, as well as squirrels, raccoons, opossums and several types of insects. These animals are born in trees, live in trees, raise their young in trees and, especially when trees are close together, seldom come down to the ground. For these animals, trees provide shelter from the weather and from enemies. Trees provide food in the form of fruits, nuts, leaves, bark, and roots. Even dead trees provide shelter and food for insects such as termites and beetles. Some animals spend their entire lives in trees - many birds, for instance, as well as squirrels, raccoons, opossums and several types of insects. These animals are born in trees, live in trees, raise their young in trees and, especially when trees are close together, seldom come down to the ground. For these animals, trees provide shelter from the weather and from enemies. Trees provide food in the form of fruits, nuts, leaves, bark, and roots. Even dead trees provide shelter and food for insects such as termites and beetles.
Because trees are plants, not animals!
The floods move trees and kill animals.
I find lots of trees and wild animals in the forest
- trees -animals -fish
The Beaver.
they do not use any particular trees to build there lodges
it means really eating trees hope this helps x
A large aquatic rodent of the genus Castor, having thick brown fur, webbed hind feet, a broad flat tail, and sharp incisors adapted for gnawing bark, felling trees, and constructing dams and underwater lodges. Beavers sometimes build dams to create lakes, slowing the flow of water and so changing their habitat. They also create lodges to live in.
They have front gnawing teeth designed for the job.
Some animals live in trees because they can hide from other animals. The trees also keep them cooler and they can find food in the trees.
Lodges were traditionally made out of various materials depending on the region and culture. For example, Native American lodges called tepees were made from animal skins, like buffalo hide, stretched over a framework of wooden poles. In other parts of the world, lodges may have been made from materials such as bark, grass, thatch, or mud.
trees provide home for animals as on them many birds make nest and animals like monkeys live there so this is how trees provide shelter for animals.
== == yes. trees are animals homes. yes. trees are animals homes.
No Australian desert animals eat trees. No Australian animals eat trees at all, although many will feed on the leaves, flowers, shoots and even bark of trees.
No Australian desert animals eat trees. No Australian animals eat trees at all, although many will feed on the leaves, flowers, shoots and even bark of trees.
Animals in trees: MONKEYS BIRDS INSECTS KOALA ANTS Hope