An omnivore is defined as an organism that consumes both plants and animals (insects included). Therefore, the organism in question would be an omnivore. A herbivore on the other hand is an organism that consumes plants exclusively.
an animal that only eats meat is a carnivore, an animal the only eats vegetation is a herbivore and an animal that eats both is called an omnivore :)
Caterpillars are known to eat the leaves of a scrub oak tree. Deer may also eat the leaves and squirrels will eat the acorns off the scrub oak.
The animal that eats slippery d*ck is me, and my friend
An animal that eats everything is called an omnivore, an animal that eats only meat is called carnivore, and lastly an animal that eats only vegetation is called a herbivore
animals which eats plant leaves known as herbivors.
no
chiken
snakess eat sticky leaves and all leaves!snakess eat sticky leaves and all leaves!
some humans
No! What makes the animal an omnivore is what the animal eats. Herbivore- Only eats leaves and other greenery Carnivore- Only eats meat Cannibal- Eats its own species flesh Omnivore-Eats plants and meat
I Think A Koala, or is that just gum leaves?
The koala is well known as an Australian animal which eats eucalyptus leaves almost exclusively.Two other small native Australian animals also eat eucalyptus leaves: the greater glider and the ringtail possumare also capable of existing solely on gum leaves.
An omnivore is defined as an organism that consumes both plants and animals (insects included). Therefore, the organism in question would be an omnivore. A herbivore on the other hand is an organism that consumes plants exclusively.
I've known coyotes to do this. Depending on where you live.
It eats both meat and vegetables/leaves/fruit.
Giraffes are a warm-weather animal that eats leaves from warm-weather plants. So, the answer is "no".