Some special glues use sap from trees.
Their is a whole bunch of different nuts, each come from their own respective tree. You would have to be more specific as to which type of nut.
Glue is typically derived from natural substances found in trees, such as sap or resin. The sap is collected from trees like pine, spruce, or fir, and processed to create different types of adhesives, like wood glue or construction glue. These adhesives are then used for various purposes like binding materials together.
Some pine trees do that.
trees and plants
A group of trees is a stand or a grove. An area that produces fruit trees is an orchard.
yes
Yes, a maple tree produces its own food and there for is a primary consumer, anything that eats the maple tree would be a secondary consumer.
you have to use the strongest glue like the plan glue
No, apples do not grow on maple trees. Apples grow on apple trees, which belong to the Malus genus, while maple trees belong to the Acer genus. Each type of tree produces its own specific type of fruit; maple trees typically produce seeds in the form of "helicopter" samaras.
Needle-leaf trees produce softwood.
There is no glue that is best on everything. Each glue has it's own specialised uses, and a glue that is excellent on something may be poor on other things.