No swine lice is species specific
The Avian "Bird" flu is passed to humans by birds and their saliva and feces. Other forms of influenza that humans can get are also mutations of viruses that birds have had, some are from pigs (like swine flu) and many are from a combination of various swine, human, other, and bird flu strains that "reassort" in a host animal. For more information about how a new strain of the flu can be created through reassortant, see the related question below about what caused the 2009 Swine flu.
i comes from pig's cholesterol and can cause swine flu
antigenic shift
The different types of influenza have different reservoirs. To talk only of the types that humans get, the largest reservoir for human influenza Type A viruses (those that we see most often in seasonal flu and that cause pandemics of the flu) is the human being. In the bird flu that humans can get (Type A Avian Influenza H5N1 and H7N9), the biggest reservoir is wild aquatic fowl such as shorebirds, ducks and geese, but also commercial chicken farmers see it in their fowl, but less frequently. Influenza A viruses are also frequently isolated in pigs and horses. It is believed that the animal reservoirs are where most new human subtypes of influenza develop. This is true of the H1N1/09 pandemic swine flu which started in pigs and birds before mutating to be able to infect humans. Swine have been demonstrated to have receptors for both human and bird flu viruses, and as such are considered a potential mixing vessel for human, swine and avian viruses. (For more about that reassortant process that occurred with the H1N1/09 Swine Flu, see the related question about what caused the swine flu.)
piggy.
Swine, perhaps.
Hestia's symbol is the hearth. Her sacred animal is the swine.
Perhaps swine.
swine flue
a swine (свине)
anybody who was study for a veterinarian, or animal production
Swine groups are called "sounders."
Hestia didn't have any plant symbols, but she did have a symbol, which was a fire place.
Brett Mizelle has written: 'Pig' -- subject(s): Pork industry and trade, Suidae, Animals and civilization, Swine, Swine as laboratory animals, Swine in art, Human-animal relationships, Swine in literature
Swine.
pigs because of the swine flu