herbivore
(noun)
any animal that eats only vegetation (i.e. that eats no meat)
Examples of herbivore in the following topics:
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Herbivores, Omnivores, and Carnivores
- Animals can be carnivores, herbivores, or omnivores in their eating strategies.
- Herbivores are animals whose primary food source is plant-based.
- Examples of herbivores include vertebrates like deer, koalas, and some bird species, as well as invertebrates such as crickets and caterpillars .
- Many large herbivores have symbiotic bacteria within their guts to assist with the breakdown of cellulose.
- Herbivores, such as this (a) mule deer and (b) monarch caterpillar, eat primarily plant material.
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Plant Defenses Against Herbivores
- Plants defend against herbivores with mechanical wounding, barriers, secondary metabolites, and attraction of parasitoids.
- Herbivores, both large and small, use plants as food and actively chew them.
- Both protect plants against herbivores.
- Other adaptations against herbivores include hard shells, thorns (modified branches), and spines (modified leaves).
- Other alkaloids affect herbivores by causing either excessive stimulation (caffeine is one example) or the lethargy associated with opioids.
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Herbivory and Pollination
- Coevolution of herbivores and plant defenses is observed in nature.
- A sort of arms race exists between plants and herbivores.
- To "combat" herbivores, some plant seeds (such as acorn and unripened persimmon) are high in alkaloids and, therefore, unsavory to some animals.
- The plant offers to the herbivore a nutritious source of food in return for spreading the plant's genetic material to a wider area.
- In return, ants discourage herbivores, both invertebrates and vertebrates, by stinging and attacking leaf-eating organisms.
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The Role of Energy and Metabolism
- Plants use photosynthesis to capture sunlight, and herbivores eat those plants to obtain energy.
- Carnivores eat the herbivores, and decomposers digest plant and animal matter.
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Angsiosperm Fruit
- Some fruits attract herbivores with color or perfume, or as food.
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Food Chains and Food Webs
- The organisms that consume the primary producers are herbivores: the primary consumers.
- As an example, a grazing food web has plants or other photosynthetic organisms at its base, followed by herbivores and various carnivores.
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Post-Cambrian Evolution and Mass Extinctions
- Plants died, herbivores and carnivores starved, and the mostly cold-blooded dinosaurs ceded their dominance of the landscape to more warm-blooded mammals.
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The Purpose and Process of Photosynthesis
- Carnivores eat other animals and herbivores eat plants.
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Mosses
- Mosses slow down erosion, store moisture and soil nutrients, and provide shelter for small animals as well as food for larger herbivores, such as the musk ox.
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Characteristics of the Animal Kingdom
- As heterotrophs, animals may be carnivores, herbivores, omnivores, or parasites .