they drink the same water
it is when a virus changes its natural host to a new host. ex. from an animal to a human.
naturally, a virus being semi-alive, will adapt, as the rest of the world keeps spinning, to avoid extinction. who knows, maybe the influenza we know today, was a virus that made a trans-species jump from Dinosaurs to birds millions of years ago; and thousands of years ago, it jumped from birds to humans. Survival is the basic force of life, even for a virus. However, trans-species jumps take millions, maybe even billions of years of evolution. The frequency of trans-species jump in the last century (AIDS, from monkeys to humans, H1N1 influenza virus from swine to humans, monkeypox from monkeys to humans) leaves me with a bad taste in my mouth... human meddlin' perhaps? -Abelardo Lopez III if you have any questions, you may contact me at Alopezz16@gmail.com.
There are species of spiders which can jump. Around 5000 species are known at this point of time.
virus spreader
No.
Your feet to jump
Inter-species gene transfer.
No
A king can jump as far as needed to legally capture pieces.
There is no species called a black panther. The black panther is either a melanistic (black) jaguar or a melanistic leopard. Both species are able to jump quite well.
it is a negative single strand RNA virus of family orthomyxoviridae having four group: influenza A, influenza B, influenza C, and thogoto virus. containing 7to 8 segments of linear rna with a genome length b/w 12,000 to 15,000.
No, printers are plug-and-play devices and only store files needed to print.