Want this question answered?
Yeah, 30 or more insect parts per 100 grams. Rodent hairs or rodent droppings are also allowed into it.
900,000,000,000,000 hairs
porcupines.
The Venus Flytrap hunts by luring insects into the jaws of its trap. Inside the trap are glands that secrete nectar. This tricks the insect into thinking it has found a flower. The trap has small sensor hairs that are triggered by the moving insect. The sensor hairs triggering causes the trap to shut and trap the insect.
I'm pretty sure the insect bristles are the little hairs on their legs.
The FDA allows :CHOCOLATE AND CHOCOLATE LIQUORInsect filth: Average is 60 or more insect fragments per 100 grams when 6 100-gram subsamples are examined OR any 1 subsample contains 90 or more insect fragmentsRodent filth: Average is 1 or more rodent hairs per 100 grams in 6 100-gram subsamples examined OR any 1 subsample contains 3 or more rodent hairs
Since butterflies are a type of insect, they do not have fur. They may however have hairs.
Since butterflies are a type of insect, they do not have fur. They may however have hairs.
No root hairs are not found on the stomata.
Root hairs are found on the tips of the roots.
A Venus Flytrap has6 hairs but if an insect touches two of the hairs within 20 sec. the Venus flytrap will close, slowly but quick enough to catch its prey.
Yes because it has to sense the insect to be able to catch it.