The termite depends on symbiotic bacteria in its gut to do the digestive chemistry of breaking down the plant cellulose into sugars.
termites
No, meadows strictly speaking do not have trees. They fit into field habitats whose vegetation consists of grasses and of non-woody plants. Meadows nevertheless may turn into woody plant-friendly habitats when people, wildlife and winds introduce shrubs, trees and vines.
termites eat wood for food.
Some trees that turn red in the fall include maple trees, oak trees, and dogwood trees.
Some trees that turn red in the fall season include maple trees, oak trees, and dogwood trees.
The type of plants where a lion lives are typically savanna grasses such as buffalo grass, red oat grass, and star grass. These grasses provide food for herbivores, which in turn attract prey for lions to hunt. Additionally, acacia trees, shrubs, and bushes can also be found in lion habitats.
The red maple trees turn red in the fall.
False. Why? Because here's an example. One type of Flagellate lives in the intestines of termites. There, they digest the wood that the termites eat, producing sugars for themselves and for the termites. In turn, the termites protect the protozoans. CREDITS TO: NORTH CAROLINA 8TH GRADE PRENTICE HALL SCIENCE EXPLORER
False. Why? Because here's an example. One type of Flagellate lives in the intestines of termites. There, they digest the wood that the termites eat, producing sugars for themselves and for the termites. In turn, the termites protect the protozoans. CREDITS TO: North Carolina 8TH GRADE PRENTICE HALL SCIENCE EXPLORER
False. Why? Because here's an example. One type of Flagellate lives in the intestines of termites. There, they digest the wood that the termites eat, producing sugars for themselves and for the termites. In turn, the termites protect the protozoans. CREDITS TO: North Carolina 8TH GRADE PRENTICE HALL SCIENCE EXPLORER
Bark beetles, carpenter ants, powderpost beetles, termites and woodborers are pests that eat wood. Bark beetles eat between the bark and the wood of dying, injured or weakened trees, carpenter ants feed upon insulation materials and rotting or weakened wood in hollow trees, hollow-core doors and the spaces between a building's double walls, termites seek cellulose and woodborers tunnel into the solid wood of recently cut or weakened trees. Powderpost beetles represent the most serious problem since they turn wood into dust or fine powder.
True grasses belong to the plant family Poaceae (sometimes referred to as Graminaea). These in turn belong to the group of monocotyledonous plants Liliaceae. Examples of grasses are: the annual Winter Grass - Poa annua; other examples of grasses include cereal crops such as wheat, maize and rice.