ocean
No. A parasite is an animal or plant that lives in or on another animal or plant and gets food or protection from it. For example- mistletoe is a plant that grows in a tree, and sucks nutrients from the tree.
According to a report from The Sun on 19 August 2009, scientists in the UK have discovered a mammal-eating plant that they believe is the largest and the rarest of the meat-eating plants, a pitcher plant named Nepenthes. It grows only on the high, windswept slopes of Mt Victoria in the Phillipines. This plant is believed to be the largest meat-eating flora in the world. It is green and red and has a stem that can grow up to 4ft long. See the related link for the article.
Plant eating animals are herbivores or said to be herbivorous
a burrowing, gregarious, plant-eating mammal with long ears, long hind legs, and a short tail.
Yes.
Elephants and rhinos.
a very, very polite parasite
Elephant , rhino , hippo , giraffe ,
Antelope, zebra, giraffe, elephant and many others.
Rhinoceros
Rhinoceros
There are quite a number of plant eating mammals in Africa. Some of them are elephants, rhinos, giraffes, and antelopes.
evergreen: plant -to- small insect -to- bird -to- larger carnivorous mammal or just take out the insect tropical: plant -to- insect -to- small mammal or small bird -to- carnivorous mammal... or snake food chains and food webs ALWAYS start with a producer (plant) and end with a carnivor (meat eating animal) or omnivor (plant& animal eating animal)
Rhinoceros
the gasosaurus :)
herbivores
A nettle is a plant, so it is not a mammal.