People, animals, and insects eat the Rattan tree. People eat the trees because of not having enough resources for survival and for medical purposes. Any animal considered an herbivore would eat the tree, and any insect that could thrive from the tree would as well.
he/she eats...frogs,rodents,birds,and Lizards
A monkey is primary consumer because a monkey eats bananas and bananas are a fruit growing off a tree, and a primary consumer eats plants
green caterpillars eat the leaves of a hickory tree
rat
Sure! Here is a simple food web: Plants: Grass Fruit tree Algae Insects: Butterfly Ant Bee Animals: Rabbit (eats grass and fruit) Deer (eats grass and fruit) Fox (eats rabbits) Hawk (eats rabbits, fox) Snake (eats insects and small animals) Owl (eats insects, small animals) Wolf (eats rabbits, deer) Bear (eats berries, insects, small animals)
deer eats leaves from the tree.. i think deer eats leaves from the tree.. i think deer eats leaves from the tree.. i think
The tree at Red's Eats in Wiscasset, ME is an American Elm.
nothing eats a maple tree
Its called the rattan.
Rattan can be found in the philippines, rattan is actually used for handicrafts
me
The animals that eats the jackal berry tree would be:elephantszebraskoala bearnigripes ants
faux rattan oviously.
It eats anything it can get, even humans.
Rattan is the specific material and wicker is what rattan is weaved into to make furniture.----------Wicker Home Furniturehttp://www.wickerhomefurniture.com
Rattan is a naturally renewable palm that grows in the tropical regions of Africa, Asia and Australasia, and is used for furniture, handicrafts, and building material among others. Rattan continues to be an invaluable part of rural people's livelihoods in South and Southeast Asia. The majority of the world's rattans are found in Indonesia's forests, with the rest of the world's supply provided by the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam and Bangladesh among others. Almost all the rattan is collected from tropical rainforests. Because of deforestation (e.g. forest conversion to other land uses), rattan populations havehas decreased over the last few decades and there is now a shortage of supply. Rattan harvesting and processing provides an alternatives to logging timber in areas where forests are scarce. In fact, rattan grows best under some sort of tree cover including secondary forest, fruit orchards, tree plantations or rubber estates. As a result rattan planting indirectly protects tree cover, along with forests. Some rattan species are appropriate for small-scale cultivation under fruit trees or in rubber gardens. This allows smallholders to earn extra money on small areas of land.
Eagles