All of these different species are related in one way or another. The woods around The Sharon Academy High School has a lot of different species that all depend on one certain species or object. And that is what they have in common: each other.
•Monarch butterflies and milkweed plants have each other in common, because you usually find monarchs on the milkweed plants. The monarchs use the milkweed plants for breeding.
•Common Eastern Bumblebees and Sunflowers have each other in common because you usually see bumble bees on sunflowers, pollinating them. Yes, bees pollinate a lot of flowers, but sunflowers are the flowers you mostly see the bees pollinating.
•Asian Lady Beetles are commonly found on deciduous trees, so most of the trees on this guide have lady beetles in common with each other.
•Maple and ash trees are where you will commonly find the eastern boxelder bugs. Which means that the boxelder bugs also have Asian lady beetles and ash & maple trees in common with each other. Because Ash trees and Maple trees are deciduous, Asian lady beetles also have those in common.
•The birch tree, ash tree, maple tree and red oak all have the Asian lady beetle in common with each other. Because all of the trees I listed are deciduous.
•The eastern gray squirrel prefers to live in an area with deciduous trees, and deciduous areas.
•The eastern chipmunk also prefers to live in an area with deciduous trees and woodlands with ample cover. This is one thing the chipmunk and squirrel have in common. They also both eat acorns and nuts.
This guide is here to help you find an understanding of how many species in the Sharon academy woods have other objects or each other in common. There may not have to be two objects that have each other or other species in common. Most of the species in this guide have their habitats in common. Most of the insects and species here live and grow in the dense woods by the Sharon academy.
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