Opportunities for breeding, feeding, and sheltering are reasons why insects live in trees. Trees offer parts on which to feed as well as spaces on which to breed, feed, and lay eggs.
Monkeys, lemurs, crabs, birds and insects
The collective noun for palm trees is a grove of palm trees.
Yes they are small insects that feed on dead plants and trees as well as dead parts of living trees. They are light yellow to black with clear to smoky gray wings.
No they do not. They generally eat insects and invertebrate. Their most common source of food are crickets.
Several animals feed on a fan palm in the rainforests of Vietnam. They are birds, insects, bats, elephants, and several other animals.
No. There is not palm trees in the state of Maine. It's to cold for them.
There are different methods available for protecting trees from insects. Chemical sprays such as insecticidal soaps and horticultural oils as well as trunk or soil injections help killing insects. Though at long term the best way is releasing other insects that feed themselves with the insects you're battling with.
No. Palm trees grow on land, not in the water.
All palm trees are vascular plants. Some palm trees bear fruit such as the coconut palm tree and the date palm tree.
They are plants making them use the sun for energy and water for thirst.
Peaches never grow on palm trees. Only coconuts and palm nuts grow from palm trees.