water voles eat grass and small insects also worms, they are basically a water based mouse :P
Vole comes from the verb "voler" meaning either 'to fly' or 'to steal'.
A small rodent that starts with the letter V is a vole. Voles are small, mouse-like rodents that are commonly found in grassy areas and fields.
A bank vole needs food such as seeds, fruits, insects, and vegetation to survive. They also require shelter in the form of burrows or vegetation cover to protect themselves from predators and harsh weather conditions. Access to water sources for drinking is also essential for their survival.
The color of a vole is brown or grey. The underside is white.
Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: MammaliaOrder: RodentiaFamily: CricetidaeSubfamily: Arvicolinae-.-The answer up there is incorrectThat is just the just like its classificationTHIS is what you are looking for:The Meadow Vole (Microtus pennsylvanicus)The Prairie Vole (Microtus ochrogaster)The Long Tailed Vole (Microtus Longicaudus)The Bank Vole (Clethrionomys glareolus)P.S Basically it is all like MicrotusP.P.S No offense to the other answer
Adders are a type of snake. If an adder encountered a vole, it would eat the vole. A vole would not hunt and eat an adder.
European Water Vole was created in 1758.
Yes such as Water voles vole, Bank vole, Field vole, Common vole, Southern vole, European, Pine vole, Tatra voleand probably more.
Tundra Voles mainly eat seeds and roots.
Yes. Many species of snake eat rodents.
voles eat lichens and grass
voles cannot eat a spider, but a spider can eat a vole.
Water Voles Dig Out Burrows Into The Banks Of The Waterways!
No. Only plants are producers. Voles eat, therefore they are consumers.
yes they do it is very healthy for them when sick or not sick
Nuns are women in religious orders. I can't see how a nun can make a vole, which is a kind of water rat.
No, they bear live youngsters.