small animals during winter when the food is scarce they will eat bark of trees. Some examples are: rabbits, deer, opossum, skunk, and beavers. I hope this helped you in any way:)
Elephants also do in the dry season, when grass & leaves are scarce
Elephants are herbivores and mainly eat grasses, roots, fruit, and bark. Their diet can vary depending on the region and season, but they typically consume a large amount of vegetation to sustain their huge bodies.
what! horses graze on grass, thay eat horse feed, fruit and veg, and hay. they do not eat meat, tree bark, or candy...
=No if horses eat tree bark the tree WILL NOT die. In order to kill a tree you must go through at least 8 layers of the tree, the bark really only protects the inner parts of a tree from animals and the weather. The horse however may have a problem though.=
they eat the little bugs and termites that they are pecking for . they somehow sense that they are under the bark and usually they are correct
Dryococelus Australis are vegetarians, like all stick insects. They will eat primarily leaves, all the way to the bark. Sometimes they can even chew on the bark. In captivity, they were known to eat figs and tree lucerne, and even bramble.
No, gray foxes do not eat tree bark.
Deer LOVE to eat the bark from a sap tree....the tree that gives maple honey.
I Know that Mooses and deer eat tree bark... And maybe otters, but I'm not sure.
Beavers eat mostly tree bark and the soft tissue inside of tree bark.
Elephants eat tree bark.
Bark beetles bore through the bark to eat the tasty nutrients in the inner bark known as the phloem and cambium layers. If they eat all the way around the tree, they will girdle the tree and the tree will die. Girdling cuts the trees food tubes and it will be unable to send nutrients up and down the trunk.
Tree Bark....
No. Tree frogs eat insects. All frogs are carnivorous.
An American beaver eats mainly tree bark. They also eat the cambium, which is a soft tree material found under the bark.
Bark, twigs , vegetation
yes they eat
bees eating birch bark