Chameleons catch their food using their long, sticky tongues, which can extend rapidly to capture prey from a distance. When a chameleon spots an insect, it aims its tongue with precision and flicks it out at high speed, often reaching lengths greater than its own body. Once the tongue makes contact with the prey, the sticky tip secures the insect, allowing the chameleon to retract its tongue and consume the meal. This unique feeding mechanism allows them to effectively hunt while remaining camouflaged in their environment.
A chameleon couldn't live without it's tongue - it's tongue is the way it catches food to eat it.
when it does.
Espio's favorite food are apples
the Tyrnnosaurs catches it's food
A cheetah catches it's food by running after it. Once a cheetah gets close enough to its prey it pounces on it.
with their tounge
Long tounge
It catches its food then it tears its food apart AND THEN IT SWALLOWS
a spider catches its food by using it fangs
the adult catches the food
the jellyfish catches its food by its foot....you are correct
Octopus