The short answer is yes. Clivia USA has a learning center with all sorts of clivia care info.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Clivia miniata.
It would be great to have more information on what you are doing now. Without that I would go on Clivia USA and look up clivia care there.
they are useful to detect any kind of light... they need to sense any kind of light because they can not survive in dry conditions and light dry their skin. that is why they sense the light and run away from it to prevent their body from drying... hope that helps!
One may find information on how to maintain a Clivia plant on the websites "Garden Web" and "Bulbs Direct". They have a good variety of easy to read guides for these plants.
because you need moisture to cause bacteria and if it is drying moisture wont get to it
My 2-yr old healthy cat just died today, for no apparent reason (indoors all the time so no fighting with a racoon, no blood or vomit). She was locked up in my bedroom by mistake for 5 hours last night and she had dug dirt out of the Clivia plant I keep there. I don't let my cats into my bedroom because I am somewhat allergic to them, so this is the first time she was unattended around that plant. I am assuming the Clivia plant is the culprit. Although I didn't see chewing evidence, my cat liked to chew on one of my living room plants.
Because they are light.
The cast of Clivia - 1954 includes: Ulrich Beiger Paul Dahlke as Potterton Claude Farell as Clivia Paul Henckels as Valdivio Peter Pasetti as Juan Charles Regnier Hans Richter Anneliese Rothenberger as Singer Herta Staal Lisa Stammer Ruth Stephan Lou Van Burg Egon Vogel Ewald Wenck Horst Wilhelm as Singer
No new chemical bonds need to be formed or existing chemical bonds broken during drying.
The drying removes the moisture. Microbes need moisture to grow. but some parasites can live on it as you need to put it in the open, so you need to heat it to a high temperature or freeze it before eating
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Clivia miniata.
Drying what?