Gnats are very small insects that fly around and look like a flea. Despite their similar appearance, they are not actually fleas.
by the look in it's eyes yellow and dangerus and it's claws
That would be a flea-bitten grey. The coloring is a grey base coat with darker 'tickings' that look like fleas on the coat.
They like themselfs to smell like sand and fish.
There are many brown bugs that can look like flees with wings. These bugs are very likely gnats or flying fleas.
Operation Sand Flea happened in 1989.
Flea eggs look like tiny little balls. When they first come out of a flea, they're white-ish-yellow. But when they're about to hatch, or going to hatch, they turn black.
no it would look like a flea
a pile of sand
sand flea
Well, I've experienced sand gnat bites before so. When you first get it on the first day it should look like a little red dot or pale dot. the second day, you may start to itch a little and it get a little redder. But be careful of how much you itch it because it might start to bleed or be infected. What you do if it really itches is to go to a drug store around you somewhere and get itching cream extra strength. then you must apply it on your face, but not to much like 3-4 times. that should do it. but you also may get 1-20 bites somewhere on your body.
flea spray and other things like hair spray and some stores have sand try that
Benthos.
Sand worms are large, predatory invertebrates found in sandy environments. They have long, slender bodies and are often depicted with multiple rows of teeth. Sand worms are fictional creatures popularized in science fiction and fantasy literature, so people cannot actually get them in real life.
Ribosomes look like granes of sand
The "arena" was the floor of the amphitheater which was covered with sand. The word comes from the Latin for sand which is "harena". So an arena in ancient Rome would look like a floor of sand.
Yes, flea eggs look identical to dandruff of a dog, in fact without a microscope look identical to human dandruff, and even be present on human scalps.