avain means bird so bird flu and you can treat it with a tweetment
The cast of Avain - 1981 includes: Matti Lehtinen as Johannes Pontto
The cast of Avain - 2006 includes: Liisa Inkinen as Emilia Olli Kontulainen as Joonatan Hinni Selin as Natalie
Avain Rachal is known for being a professional baseball player that plays in Major League Baseball. The professional team that he plays for is the Cincinnati Reds.
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It was called "Avain".
No. Every insurance companies are required those applicants to have at least one car to avain a car insurance.
go to an avain vet. they might be able to tell. find an avian vet near you http://aav.org/vet-lookup/
Juha Nirkko has written: 'Lykyn avain' -- subject(s): Folklore 'Ilokontti' -- subject(s): Anecdotes, Karelian Proverbs
There are a few causes for this. This bird may have a genetic disorder in which feathers do not grow. OR this bird could be a plucker. This means the bird plucks it's feathers. Either way, you are going to want to take it to an AVAIN vet to get it checked out.
Tyrannosaurus appeared in the Late Cretaceous Era 68.5 million years ago, roaming the Earth for only 3 million years til' it died out 65.5 million years ago along with the rest of non-avain dinosaur species.
No you cant get it from avian flu directly, because swine flu is literally pig flu, so it originated from pigs, or so the name says. Same thing for avian flu, its, bird flu. S.o no, but you can get swine flu from birds, because flus can be carried from organisms to organisms. So, cutting it short, you can't get it from avian flu, but you can get it from a bird that has swine flu. A bit tedious but that's my answer.
Mangrove snakes (Bioga dendrophila spp) have a neurotoxic venom. The venom is not generally thought to be of medical significance in human envenomations although is capable of causing swelling, bruising and significant pain to the victim. The primary purpose of the snake's venom is to take birds as prey. The venom of the mangrove snake is made to target birds and is quite disabling for the avain prey. Scientists are looking at this venom's application for biomedical applications. Doug Hotle Curator of Herpetology Natural Toxins research Center Texas A&M University-Kingsville