a tripping hazard to people walking
No, but cows can destroy pine trees by rubbing the bark off, chewing off the twigs and branches, etc. Pine trees are actually poisonous to cattle, especially to pregnant cows.
Giraffes eat the twigs off of trees. They also consume shrubs, grass and fruit.
Yes. I just finished raking about 3 wheelbarrow loads of twigs from our red oaks.
twigs , leaves , and trees
Roots, trunk, branches, twigs , needles and cones.
anything really but they love empty plastic plant pots, fresh twigs off apple trees and tunnel's to hop through hope this helps
Beavers and the tapir are two animals that eat twigs, bark and leaves of various trees. Beavers also use large twigs and branches to build their homes, called beaver dams.
No, twigs are not abiotic; they are biotic components of an ecosystem. Twigs are parts of trees or shrubs, which are living organisms. Abiotic factors refer to non-living elements in an environment, such as water, soil, and temperature. Therefore, twigs, being derived from living plants, are classified as biotic.
A dam, which is made of cut-down trees, twigs and sticks, and mud.
they eat leaves and twigs from acacia, wild apricot, and regular trees.
Yes, twigs are considered biotic because they are parts of trees and plants, which are living organisms. Biotic factors refer to the living components of an ecosystem, and since twigs originate from living plants, they fall under this category.
They are similar to cows so they eat the same types of things cows do, such as- grass, some twigs off shrubs and trees, and other forbs that are edible.