Its in the millions - faeces is made up of mucus, waste from the body, broken down tissue and bacteria
No. But pigeon feces can contain microbes that can cause severe disease in people. If dealing with substantial accumulations, always take precautions to prevent breathing in dust raised when the feces are disturbed.
When feces contain too much water, that is called diarrhea. Sometimes that can be caused by ingesting certain chemicals, while at other times, that can be caused by microbes and sickness.
Microbes can be present on many difference surfaces in many different environment. There is no one inhabiting site for microbes as they are small, and capable of existing in many different environments.
Roughly 100,000,000 microbes.Roughly 100,000,000 microbes.
Hundreds of trillions
yes there are many helpful microbes like lactobacillus that helps in making some milk products
Animal feces is called scat just to show that it is non-human. There are many other terms used for the term "feces" to show non-human feces. These are dung, droppings and spoor.
There are both harmful and useful microbes. Harmful microbes like bacteria,virus and fungus can cause diseases while some useful microbes like bacteria can help in fermentation process like the yeast or as food like mushroom and many lacobacillus microbes that help in producing vitamins and in synthesis of food.Many microbes help produce antibiotic medicines. Microbes like algae are edible or help by photosynthesis to maintain the CO2 -O2 balance in the environment.
None. A rectangular prism has no anus, so it is unable to produce any feces.
There are different colors of feces for many different reasons. Black feces indicates blood and you should see a doctor immediately. Green feces may indicate that you are a certain food dye.
There are many dangers of working with microbes including infection. You could also die from getting these microbes inside of you.
The final five feet of your gastrointestinal tract, your large intestine or colon, has almost no oxygen. By the time food reaches your colon, your body's work of digestion is almost over. The remaining task for your large intestine is to remove the excess water from what's left of your food, or feces, over the next 12 to 24 hours. If the feces stay in the colon any longer, they will become dehydrated and impacted as more water is removed. On the other hand, feces that travel too quickly through the colon as the result of intestine-damaging infections for example, result in loose stools, or diarrhea. The slow pace in your colon makes it an ideal place for microbes to colonize. Your colon contains more than 500 different species of bacteria living in a 3-pound mass of partially digested food, with one trillion organisms per gram of feces. The microbes in this part of your digestive system include Enterococci, Clostridia, and Lactobacilli, but by far the most abundant species are Bacteroides and the oxygen-intolerant, lactic acid-producing Bifidobacterium. Probiotic microbes outnumber potential pathogens like E.coliby as much as ten thousand to one. Bacteria make up about 60% of the weight of your feces, and you excrete your own weight in fecal bacteria every year.