Horses have 2 ears.
There are 3 accessory organs and 1 organ. The 3 accessory organs are nail, hair, and glands. The one organ in the integumentary system is skin.
Auditory distraction is one of the sub symptoms under Reflex Distraction. Auditory information floods the brain with information sufficiently to cause other sensory and cognitive capabilities to falter. Overall, there are three Root Causes for Distraction: 1: Reflex Distraction 2: Impulse Distraction 3: Life Style Distraction. Brain chemistry as well as instinctive drives are also a factor in the intensity or biasness toward distraction or non-distraction.
1.) They protect delicate organs 2.) They permit significant changes in size and shape of internal organs
group of organs that interact together to perform 1 function
cell make organs through these steps 1. cell 2. tissue- group of cell carrying out a specific function 3. organs- group of tissues carrying out a specific function so as you can see cells form organs through these steps.
1.
1. Eyes - Sight 2. Ears - Hearing, Balance 3. Nose - Smell 4. Tongue - Taste 5. Skin - Touch & Temperature
The answer depends on 1. how good you are, 2. where in the world you work, 3. how many lucky breaks you get.
a maximum of 1 day
1. Visual 2. Auditory 3. Kinesthetic
There are 3 accessory organs and 1 organ. The 3 accessory organs are nail, hair, and glands. The one organ in the integumentary system is skin.
Equine tapeworms are between 1-3 inches in length.
It has 1 organism, that's its body.Note: If you meant organs you should ask a different question, because organisms are different from organs
temporal lobe (also hearing and memory and such) Actually, the temporal lobe is used for auditory processing and is home to the primary auditory cortex. It is the olfactory bulb.
Equine Viral Rhinopneumonitis is the Herpes of the horse world and is highly dangerous. ~A horse of course :) ~
Yes they have a good one http://64.233.167.104/u/murray?q=cache:mn1miJwDQ8kJ:www.murraystate.edu/agr/academic_programs/AnimalEquineSci.pdf+equine&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&ie=UTF-8
Organs of speech are classified into three main categories: Primary articulators: tongue and lips Secondary articulators: teeth, alveolar ridge (gum ridge), hard palate, velum (soft palate), and uvula Tertiary articulators: pharynx, larynx, and vocal folds