A player can effectively use the Netrunner card "Scavenge" by targeting a program that has served its purpose and then using "Scavenge" to retrieve it from the heap and install a new program in its place. This allows the player to recycle valuable programs and adapt their strategy quickly, giving them a competitive advantage in gameplay.
No. Most kangaroos are herbivores. They do not scavenge.
I had to 'scavenge' the automotive graveyard for the right hubcap.
The noun forms for the verb to scavenge are scavenger and the gerund, scavenging.
Siderophores are small molecules produced by bacteria to scavenge iron and compete with animal hosts for this essential nutrient. They have high affinity for iron and can sequester it from the host's iron-binding proteins, aiding bacterial growth and survival within the host. This competitive advantage in acquiring iron can contribute to the pathogenicity of certain bacteria.
When a free meal is available that does not require much effort and poses little danger, a lion will take advantage of carrion. When lions cannot scavenge, they kill their own prey.
in the wild they often scavenge on deer and elk so yes they do scavenge
They scavenge for them.
Tasmanian devils both hunt and scavenge. Why they scavenge when they are effervescent utters as well is not known, but what is known is that, by cleaning up the environment of carrion (dead animals), the Tasmanian devil performs a very useful function.
Well, that depends on what you mean by scavenger. Does it scavenge alone, or in a pack? Does it it "hunt" scavenge, or "forage" scavenge? You see, all living things scavenge. Even humans, who scavenge for the most inflated chip packet at the shops. So I believe, yes, cheetahs are scavengers, in one form or another. Hope that helps, from PNE.
I believe Badgers do.
Anything they can scavenge.
What_do_shrimp_eatThey don't scavenge.