They follow certain colors becuase of the pheromones, or scents, in the pens or markers. Usually, scout termites will leave a trail of pheromones for other termites to follow. They think there will be food at the end of the trail, so that is why they follow it.
It's white in colour and can eat up a WHOLE wooden house. It's something like an ant.
I'm pretty sure that is is color blindness to certain colors which makes it so you can only see certain colors.
The bright colors in petals attract pollinators such as bees and butterflies. Certain colors of petals only attract certain types of pollinators.
No to have them. But everyone could only where clothing that had certain colors.
Yes and no. some people are only color blind when certain colors meet for example: if you were black and yellow color blind a bee would only be one of the colors.
Because the electrons of the atom are in specific energy levels. Therefore the emission of light is dependent upon the energy levels of the atom. F A B I N
The colors that can appear within the human genome are regulated by the genes that code for specific colors. The human eye-color is limited by what colors the genes can code for.
no they only eat through wood
A termite is the only insect that can digest wood cellulose... The reason they can do this is the trichonympha live inside the termites and they are what breaks the wood down making it digestible.
Dogs can't see bright colors like humans do but they can see soft, very light colors of only certain colors, they are limited.
Definitely not. Termites only eat wood, and nothing else.
termite are blind so color doesn't matter. whats important is the ink. The ink of some pens mimic a pheromone that termites use to communicate in the wild but keep in mind only some inks will work like expo doesn't work and again color doesn't matter. if the termite looses the trail they will walk around the paper blind
Visible light contains all of the colors with in the spectrum. The only way we see color is the bending and refraction of the visible light sending certain wave lengths back, which our brain interprets as different colors.