a tiger cannot be seen inside tall grasses because the stripes on tigers help to camouflage with their surroundings
in fields, holes, long grass, medows, any where that they cant be spotted TOO easily.
When hiding, the lion stalks it's prey and eventually hunts it down.
Sometimes, because grass provides a great hiding place.
Cow's graze on grass to feed as they can easily digest grass.
Chipmunks do camouflage to not be eaten by bigger animals! THey can be hiding in grass, on a tree, inside a tree, or live at Disney land. :) DISNEYLAND IS WHERE CHIP AND DALE LIVE!:)
in fields, holes, long grass, medows, any where that they cant be spotted TOO easily.
In a patch of grass by it's self
by hiding in grass
grass rats snakes
No, eight-spotted ladybugs do not eat grass. The insects in question may be seven-spotted (Coccinella septempunctata) or nine-spotted (Coccinella novemnotata) ladybugs. They number among the world's carnivorous ladybugs and therefore prey upon such garden pests as aphids and scale insects.
Same as any other horse- grass and grain.
When hiding, the lion stalks it's prey and eventually hunts it down.
Astroturf is the name of artificial grass. Some people use artificial grass for inside putting greens.
Grass does not incorporate silicon dioxide (the material glass is made from) into its structure, so - NO - there is no glass inside grass.
Herbivores get energy from grass more easily.
Yes, black-spotted, yellow-bodied ladybugs can eat grass. The herbivorous insects in question carry the names 26-spotted (Henosepilachna vigintisexpunctata) and 28-spotted (Henosepilachna vigintioctopunctata) ladybugs. The two ladybugs favor potato foliage even though crops as beans, pumpkins, radishes, spinach and turnips will be considered as food sources.
western spotted frogs eat flies and grass and they live in trees in western Arizona but also in Mexico, California, and Mississippi,t.y.