No because they are two different things
There isn't any different between head lice and pubic lice but how they look.
There just might be something crawling in your hair if you meant hair. Lice can crawl on the hair and be on the scalp to make you feel like scratching the head. See a doctor to confirm if lice is the problem or something else.
The mature, grown, lice will leave eggs or nits in the hair. those eggs will hatch and turn into mature, grown, lice. This process with keep repeating until you get all lice and lice eggs out of the hair!
No, lice do not turn into craps. A baby crab is called a crab from the time it is born. Crab lice, horseshoe crabs, and king crabs are not true crabs.
it reminds us that from ash we shall turn to ash. we are all dust just created by God.
First, a lice can fall or attach to someone's hair. Then, it lays eggs and the eggs turn into lice, THEN there is more and more lice. To treat lice, you just go to the store and buy some of the shampoo that they have. The intructions are all on the bottle or inside the box that it comes in. Trust me, you don't want to just leave it in your hair.
When Dreams Turn to Dust was created in 1996.
A pond An aquarium and a garden are also ecosystems. Your home: Everything from the dust mites in your pillow to you. Some of the components are these: * You shed skin scells * The dust mites eat them and grow fat * They are in turn eaten by slightly bigger bugs which are in turn eaten by bigger critters * The bugs you can see (ants, plant lice, fungus flies) are eaten by spiders and spiders by centipedes * All of the above animals produce waste which feeds the moulds and fungus in the rugs * You bring home bed bugs from your trip they eat your blood. * You feed the dog or cat which sheds skin feeding the dust mites and other scaengers * Your house plants have mould, mildew and fungus which feed insects and have an interdependence with each other * Once in a while you get roaches and mice which eat your food and the pet food. They feed on each other too.
-yes, with a mirror and a comb. -You can check for lice behind the ears, around the neck, or around the crown. Lice can turn from clear white, to dark brown.
The head of a pin is about 2mm in diameter. Use this to compare the relative sizes of cells and organisms sitting on a pinhead. Nearly invisible without magnification, dust mites dwarf pollen grains and human cells. In turn, bacteria and viruses are even smaller.
to much farming
Bones do not turn into dust on their own. In certain conditions, such as extreme heat or prolonged exposure to the elements, bones may deteriorate or become brittle, but they do not naturally turn into dust.