Termites primarily feed on cellulose, which is found in wood, leaves, and other plant materials, rather than pith, bark, or seeds. While some species may occasionally consume bark or softer plant materials, they generally do not target seeds. Their diet mainly consists of decaying wood and decomposing plant matter. Therefore, while termites might interact with pith and bark, they do not primarily eat them.
macrotermes and odontatermes
they eat mostly seeds and fruit but occasionally if they're starving they'll eat bark.
Animals cant digest it due to the silica in its leaves. But small birds and termites eat the seeds.
they eat the little bugs and termites that they are pecking for . they somehow sense that they are under the bark and usually they are correct
roaches eat termites
no, termites eat wood, but snakes might eat termites
You usually eat the fruits from the trees.
In the wild chinchillas eat fruits, plants, seeds, insects and sometimes tree bark.
fruits, plants, seeds, insects and sometimes tree bark.
About 67% of their diet is fruit, 17% leaves, seeds and stems and 3% termites
No part of the sunflower plant is poisonous, so some people eat everything from leaves to petals to the pith of the stalk. Commercially, the only parts usually consumed are the hulled seeds and the tubers from Jerusalem artichokes.
These omnivorous tend to eat anything to survive. Other than eating seeds and other vegetation, they will eat termites, bees, and ant larvae.