This question is in "Food and Cooking", so I'm assuming you mean around your kitchen as you are cooking. For me personally, I usually clean up after I do all the cooking and after the meal is finished.
to avoid easy spread of diseases and to keep the environment clean
No. The reason to avoid adding chemicals to cat litter is that cats will ingest it when they clean themselves. This being said, pregnant women should avoid cleaning the litter box due to the parasite Toxoplasma gondii being able to be transmitted through cat feces, which can cause a condition called Toxoplasmosis. Exposure is also possible through contact with raw meat or contaminated soil.
by hiding under leaf litter, logs, rocks, loose soil, and in the depths of a water source they reside near
No you should avoid those when you are pregnant. And even if you weren't pregnant I would recommend that you never have that where you sleep.
Litter in the context of trash on the ground has no group noun of its own. Litter is the context of newborn animals is the collective noun. Example: A litter of kittens was nestled in a basket.
The better choice in this situation would be a female; to avoid an unwanted litter.
litter
Litter bugs Litter Bugs
A group of puppies is called a litter. The size of a litter can vary drastically based on the breed and if it is the dogs first litter.
To avoid Taxoplasma during pregnancy women should keep cats indoors; avoid handling cat litter; cover sandboxes; wear gloves for gardening; wash after handling cats, raw meat or poultry, soil, or sand; and, cook food thoroughly.
Yes, the noun litter is a collective noun for:a litter of kittensa litter of puppiesa litter of cubsa litter of pigletsin general a group of any newborn animals
streets were kept clean from litter. All the animals were killed. Dead people were buried deep under the earth.