they eat insects
varroa mite eats lacy tree ferns
beetles and ants!
No, horses should not eat ferns as they can be toxic to them. Consuming ferns can lead to health issues such as colic, weakness, and other digestive problems in horses. It is best to avoid letting horses have access to ferns in their environment.
Golden leather ferns (Acrostichum aureum) can be consumed by various herbivores, including certain types of insects, slugs, and snails. Additionally, some mammals, such as deer and livestock, may graze on these ferns when other food sources are scarce. However, the ferns are generally not a primary food source for most animals due to their tough texture and chemical defenses.
There areabout 20000 different species of plants classified as ferns.
In the summer it eats, grass,ferns,leaves,herbs,dandilions,daisies,horsetail, and clover. In the winter it eats, buds, twigs, bark, and evergreens. It will eat bait from traps and sometimes dead rodents like mice.
Examples of ferns include the Boston fern, bird's nest fern, maidenhair fern, and staghorn fern. Ferns are non-flowering plants that reproduce via spores and are known for their feathery fronds and ability to thrive in shaded, moist environments.
There are 20,000 species of ferns. Ferns are vascular.
Ferns are green plants.So they do have chloroplasts.
Ferns, mosses, and liverworts are examples of plants that reproduce by spores rather than seeds. Spores are single cells that can develop into new plants under the right conditions, while seeds are multicellular structures produced by flowering plants.
Ferns are seedless vascular plants.