Mangroves are native trees (and habitats) common throughout the coastal areas of Australia's northern and eastern coasts.
Mangroves are not dogs. Mangroves are tropical trees that grow in brackish water.
The most widespread vegetation within estuaries are mangroves. Some examples of the mangroves that thrive in estuarine habitats are red mangroves, black mangroves, white mangroves, and salt marsh.
mangroves look like trees
Mangroves can breath through their different root systems
No. Mangroves are found in tropical rainforests.
mangrove are only from Australia. that's why the call it mangroves
if a big wave comes by a mangrove them it can nock the mangroves down
Mangroves National Park was created in 1992.
Green turtles eat mangrove leaves. It is not just the leaves themselves which attract the green turtle, but epiphytic algae or invertebrates found on the leaves. Certain crabs have also been observed eating the seedlings and leaves of mangroves, such as the mangrove crab and the tree-dwelling mangrove tree crab.
No. Platypuses do not eat mangroves or any other plant matter.
Mangroves live in swamps and in coastal wetlands and do not live in deserts.
The desert fox (fennec) does not live in mangroves.