Answer:
The selenium particles when coated on paper towels were extremely effective and continuously inhibited (about a 90% reduction) the growth of gram-positive bacteria including S. aureus and S. epidermidis after 24, 48, or 72 hours.
Answer:
They are intermediate hosts.
Explanation:
Disease-transmitting insects are called vectors.
The life cycle of disease-causing pathogens is closely linked to the biology of the insect that carries it.
The symptoms of gongylonemiasis include hemorrhagic inflammation at the site the pathogen invades, followed by granulomatous tissue development that produces nodules in the invaded organ.
Some diseases transmitted by insects occur in both humans and other mammals because our differences in anatomy and physiology are not very different.
It is unlikely that clinical symptoms will occur in humans if the insect were the definitive host, because our biology is quite different from their biology, and the pathogen would be adapted to fulfill its entire life cycle in their body.
I think its false because gas exchange can happen in blood also