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what eats a Pediasrum
herbivore eats plants and carnivore eats meat. omnivore eats both plants and meat.
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 :)
its were a human eats another human.its were a human eats another human.
A predator is any organism that eats other organisms. A cannibal is one that eats its own kind of organism. For example, a lion is a predator when it eats a zebra, but a cannibal if it eats another lion.
Catkins are the flowers of a willow.
The Rock Ptarmigan eats a wide variety of foods including; Birch and willow buds, catkins, leaves, berries and seeds. The young will also eat insects.
The flowers of a willow tree are called catkins. There is no standard collective noun for catkins, but based on their natural formation you could use the collective noun a cluster of catkins.
No, an aspen tree is part of the populus genus. Only the trees from the birch genus (Betulus) produced catkins as the male pollinating adaptation The aspen Populus tremula does produce catkins in late winter and early spring. They are long and grey.
Yes.
The Rock Ptarmigan eats a wide variety of foods including; Birch and willow buds, catkins, leaves, berries and seeds. The young will also eat insects.
Yes, red maple trees (Acer rubrum) produce catkins, which are slender, cylindrical flower clusters. These catkins appear in early spring before the leaves emerge, with male catkins being longer and more noticeable than female ones. The flowers are typically red or yellow and are an important source of nectar for pollinators.
Willows (genus Salix) are known for producing catkins, which are elongated flower clusters that appear before the leaves in spring. Common species that produce catkins include the weeping willow (Salix babylonica), black willow (Salix nigra), and pussy willow (Salix discolor). These catkins can be male or female, depending on the plant, and are an important source of pollen for early pollinators.
bright and cheerful
they are green, red, or brown
Yes, the diamond-leaf willow (Salix eriocephala) does produce flowers. These flowers are typically catkins, which are elongated clusters that emerge in the spring before the leaves. The catkins are usually yellowish or greenish and can be either male or female, with the male catkins being more conspicuous. After pollination, the female catkins develop into seed capsules that disperse seeds in the wind.
how am i supposed to know