Horses, cows sheep etc mainly eat grass and a few weeds so the manure can contain grass ... Due to the relatively lower level of proteins in vegetable matter, herbivore manure has a milder smell than the dung of carnivores or omnivores
Most carnivorous(meat eaters) animals wouldn't eat grass. Herbivores(plant eaters) and omnivores(meat and plant eaters) would eat grass and other plants.
herbivore
Antelopes are herbivores, grass eaters, they need teeth to shear the grass, and to grind it up. Predators' teeth, carinvore (=meat eaters) teeth look quite different. Just look in the mouth of any cat or dog. It's the grabbing canines, and the shearing teeth. No grinders.
Yes if its eaten and digested by a grass eating animal
No, they are carnivores, meat eaters.
Cows' feces is not grass because it is a byproduct of digestion. When cows eat grass, their digestive systems break down the plant material through fermentation and microbial action, extracting nutrients. The remaining waste, which includes undigested fibers, bacteria, and other substances, is excreted as feces. Thus, while grass is the input, the feces is a transformed output resulting from the complex digestive process.
Yes, cat feces and urine can harm your grass due to the high nitrogen content in cat urine that can burn the grass. The feces can also contain harmful bacteria that can negatively affect the grass. It's best to clean up after your cat promptly to prevent damage to your lawn.
No, lions eat the gemsbok. Gemsboks are grass-eaters(herbivores) and lions are meat-eaters(carnivores).
Herbivores (plant eaters)Browsers (leaf eaters)Grazers (grass eatersOmnivores (eats all groups)CarnivoresInsectivores (insect eaters)Piscivores (fish eaters)
no - they're herbivores (only plant eaters).
No. Buffalo are herbivores, specifically grazers. They eat grass.
Certain animals, like cows, fertilize with feces which enriches the soil.