no
The sudoriferous glands, the exact name is eccrine sweat glands.
Sweat is produced by sweat glands, which are located in the skin. The primary purpose of sweat is to regulate body temperature by cooling the body as it evaporates from the skin.
No, they have sweat glands
Sweat glans are pots that are all over your body .they produce sweat
There are very fine and coiled tubular glands in the skin. They are called as sweat glands. In hot and humid tropical climate, the person can produce sweat at the rate of one litre per hour.
Absolutely not and in fact, have nothing to do with hygiene at all.
Bugs are attracted to sources of food, water, and shelter. Common attractants include sugary substances, decaying organic matter, standing water, and warm, dark hiding spots. Scents from flowers, fruits, and sweating human bodies can also draw bugs.
Bed bugs are attracted to humans because they are drawn to the carbon dioxide and body heat that we emit. They are also attracted to the scent of our skin and the chemicals in our sweat. This makes us a prime target for bed bug feeding.
Lady bugs eat other bugs. They do not eat plants including watermelon.
A character in the image of a cartoon animated rabbit known as "Bugs Bunny", which was created by the Warner Bros. Co.
Dermis can not produce the sweat. Sweat is produced by the sweat glands. They lie in the dermis.
The sweat pore is were the sweat from the sweat gland is released. The main function of sweat is temperature regulation (thermoregulation).
The homophone for "sweat" is "sweet".
Your things do have sweat glands, so yes, they can sweat.
Colour.Hippo sweat is red/orange while human sweat is colourless.
Yes it is and it smells bad.
Sweat - Snoop Dogg feat David Guetta Sweat It Out- The Dream