As carrion refers to dead flesh it doesn't eat anything but it is eaten by scavengers.
Carrion is a word used to describe the decaying flesh of dead animals. A good sentence would be, the carrion made the whole area smell like death.
The decaying flesh of dead animals.
The correct spelling is carrion (meat on a carcass, a predated animal).
That is the correct spelling of the word vultures(generally carrion-eating birds).
The collective noun for carcasses is "carrion." "Carrion" refers to the decaying flesh of dead animals, which can attract scavengers and play a vital role in ecosystems as a source of nutrients. The term is often used in the context of scavengers feeding on dead animals in the wild.
Wedge-tailed eagles and Tasmanian devils eat carrion. So do crows.
They eat carrion, which is rotting dead organisms.
Carrion is dead meat. It does not eat anything. However - cretures such as Tasmanian Devils eat carrion, as do crows, vultures and numerous worms.
I believe you may be referring to carrion. Carrion means dead meat. Vultures and scavengers like hyena's eat carrion.
They die if they fail to eat the next turn and become carrion.
No. They are scavengers, they eat carrion.
Flies that eat dead things.
Mostly fish and carrion.
A Griffon is a vulture and eats carrion.
A Griffon is a vulture and eats carrion.
Yes and some jaguars eat carrion although they most often eat living animals. Jaguars are often described as oppportunistic feeders because they eat over 85 species of animals, plus plants and dead carcasses.
Foxes eat small mammals, carrion and sometimes even fruit.