Yeah, 30 or more insect parts per 100 grams. Rodent hairs or rodent droppings are also allowed into it.
900,000,000,000,000 hairs
porcupines.
The Venus Flytrap hunts by luring insects into the jaws of its trap. Inside the trap are glands that secrete nectar. This tricks the insect into thinking it has found a flower. The trap has small sensor hairs that are triggered by the moving insect. The sensor hairs triggering causes the trap to shut and trap the insect.
I'm pretty sure the insect bristles are the little hairs on their legs.
Since butterflies are a type of insect, they do not have fur. They may however have hairs.
Since butterflies are a type of insect, they do not have fur. They may however have hairs.
No root hairs are not found on the stomata.
A Venus flytrap is a carnivorous plant that catches prey by snapping its hinged trap shut when tiny hairs on its surface are triggered. When an insect lands on the trap and brushes against the hairs twice, the trap closes, sealing the insect inside and digesting it with enzymes. The plant gains nutrients from the insect to supplement its diet due to the nutrient-poor soil it grows in.
Yes because it has to sense the insect to be able to catch it.
Well, this is a new one on me. The government sets purity standards for foodstuffs, and the inclusion of a certain amount of "foreign matter" is permissible as long as it poses no actual health hazard, under the grounds that it's pretty much impossible to make something absolutely pure at an affordable price. That said... it's hard to imagine how pig hairs could get into a peanut butter cup. Rodent hairs in chocolate, sure; peanut shells or insect parts in peanut butter, okay; pig hairs in bacon, maybe; pig hairs in chocolate or peanut butter, though, is a bizarre combination. They certainly aren't intentionally included, if that's what you were asking.
The tiny hairs on a Venus Flytrap's leaves act as trigger hairs that detect movement. When an insect or prey touches these hairs multiple times within a short period, the trap closes to capture the prey for digestion.