because cat's toungs are generally made for cleaning a toung has "saliva" or spit so cats spit has to have more "germ killing" substances, while dogs usally are dirty or take baths.
It depends on weather you brush it's teeth and if it has a disease.
Answeri believe so....Answerthrough study and research it has been proved that dog saliva can kill E-coli and other harmful bacteria.
No. While a dog's saliva may contain less bacteria than a human's, it still contains bacteria, and it certainly does not have any magical curative properties.
No they have less because their saliva is more acidic
Humans' and dogs' mouths have roughly the same amount of germs. However, humans brush their teeth more often and more thoroughly than dogs, so ours is probably cleaner. There is a myth that dogs' mouths have less germs than those of humans, but this has been proven to be false.
For a science fair experiment you can experiment if a dog's saliva kills bacteria. First you get bacteria and put it on four microscpe slides. Then, you swab two dogs' mouths for saliva and then you put the saliva of one of the dogs on two of the slides and do the same with the other dog's saliva. Let it set for 24 hours and see if there is less bacteria than before.
is saliva more acidic than blood? Saliva is alkaline in nature with a pH of 7.4. The blood in our body is alkaline, just like our saliva when we are new-born babies and the pH decreases as we age. So, saliva, for the major part of our life, is not more acidic than blood. But, you know, it depends upon the individual as the saliva and blood pH levels may vary from person to person.
Not unless you make out with a dog. But other than that, why would you mix the two?
because they have more bacteria cells, since bacteria divide faster then somatic cells.
3 times as much.
An animal. Human mouths are much dirtier and contain more bacteria than most animal's.
A dog's mouth is cleaner because it contains less bacteria although these bacteria are more harmful to humans
MILLIONS of them, not all cataloged or identified even today. You are outnumbered even within your own skin; there are more bacteria and other non-human cells in your body than there are human cells.