The small white middle indicates what you are looking at is bird feces. Birds do not process uric acid the same way other animals do and therefore it is evacuated through the same system as fecal matter.
My guess is rabbits- deer also poop in pellets, but i doubt deer were in your living room.
Could be rats, or mice too.
big animal, small animal, baby animal, and DEAD animal.
A big animal .(antonyms are opposites)
They are carnivores, feeding on: * small animals * small animal particles * protozoans
In captivity stinkpots tend to favor carnivorous food items like aquatic turtle pellets, snails, earth worms, grasshoppers, crickets, ghost shrimp, small crayfish & commercial aquatic turtle pellets are taken.
any small animal well family feud answers are mice but any small animal dummy
Crushed animals food forced together in small pellets.
It depends on the person. If the person is fat the poops are fat and long. If the person is small then the poops are small ans short. That's digusting! But see answer above...and also, Mr/Miss/Mrs/Ms last answer, just because somebody is fat doesn't mean they have big poops! And the same with small people.
mice poops ... or really small chairs.
They're omnivorous, so in the aquarium you can feed them general tropical flakes or small pellets.
hay (timothy or alfalfa) my chin like timothy and mazuri chinchilla pellets. you can find them at any regular pet store that has small animal stuff.
2000
small would pellets
Yes.
A pellet can come in various sizes depending on the type of pellet you are looking for. There are wood pellets for stoves, pellets for guns, pellets for grills. Usually pellets are small in size and under an inch wide.
They're made from coloured pellets. Most of the pellets are white - with a small proportion of coloured pellets mixed in. When the mixture is melted in the forming machine - all the pellets simply melt and mix together.
Coal is transported by;Rail (large pieces and small pellets)Truck (large pieces and small pellets)Slurry pipelines ( pulverized coal in water)
nonpareils, small pellets of colored sugar