Where on find eggs of a Bot Fly sticking to the hairs of your horse's ankles. The subfamily that these eggs likely belong to are: Gasterophilinae.
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What is Gasterophilinae?</h3>
The Gasterophilinae are a subfamily of the Oestridae that comprises huge, parasitic flies; this group was previously classified as a family, but all subsequent classifications locate them squarely within the Oestridae. Many members of this subfamily spend part of their larval lives in herbivore digestive systems.
Gasterophilus intestinalis, often known as the horse bot fly, is a species of insect in the Oestridae family that may be found all over the world. The adults, which resemble bumblebees, are most active throughout the summer.
Female botflies deposit eggs on blood-sucking arthropods like mosquitoes and ticks to reproduce. When afflicted arthropods attack a person or another mammal, larvae from the eggs are released. A botfly larva burrows into subcutaneous tissue after entering the host's skin through a bite wound or a hair follicle.
Learn more about Bot Fly:
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Traits that have 3 or more phenotypes may be the result of MULTIPLE alleles, I believe. Hope that helps!
Qualitative and Quantitative :)
The fresh water is in a very big minority when compared to the total amount of water reserves on the planet.
The freshwater accounts for only 2%, while the rest of the 98% are saline water.
But the available freshwater for usage is even less, as from those 2% around 87% is frozen in the ice caps and the glaciers. Around 12% is groundwater, and not all of it is suitable for usage, and only 1% is the freshwater that is the most available from the rivers and the lakes.
This makes the freshwater a prime thing for preservation, as it is what enables the life on the planet, so much more measures have to be undertaken for it to be clean and in healthy condition.