Ticks locate hosts by
detecting animal body odors, body heat, moisture, or vibrations.
Not exact matches
As the jaguar advanced under cover of darkness, the infrared sensors
detected the
animal's
body temperature and movements, setting off a camera.
Could the newly identified ones on olfactory cells do the same,
detecting pathogens but those outside the
body on another
animal?
In their burrows during the winter, the
animals»
body temperatures —
detected by implanted transmitters — remained constant, indicating that their clocks were off.
They're embedded in a cats»
body and send information about the
animal's surroundings to sensory nerves, allowing felines to
detect changes in their surroundings.
This represents the time period from when the larvae has entered the
animal's
body until the microfilaria can be
detected in the blood.