The ears are bug free but feel like worms

Updated on healthy 2024-06-19
3 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    It may be inflammation, otitis media, it is recommended that you go to the hospital for a check-up, it is not good to use your own medicine.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Insects don't have the same distinct ears as mammals, but they have a variety of auditory organs. These auditory organs are very simple, and although they can sense sounds acutely, they cannot distinguish between high and low sounds. Many insects do not have a real auditory organ, and they use some special organs on their bodies to perceive external sounds, such as male mosquitoes that use the hairs on their tentacles to sense the sounds of female mosquitoes.

    There are also insects with eardrums on their bodies, either on the sides of their bodies, or on their legs. The eardrum is very sensitive to external sounds, and after being vibrated by a certain sound, the eardrum transmits the frequency of the sound tremor to the sensory cells, and the insect can "hear" the sound. Crickets, locusts, grasshoppers, cicadas, etc., are all examples of such insects.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Insects also have ears, and the ears of insects are the organs of hearing. The auditory organ structure of insects is different from that of higher animals, and it is made up of eardrums or villi. The eardrums that form the ears include cicadas, crickets, golden bells, etc.; There are male moths and caterpillars that sense sounds from the fluff.

    So, where do insect ears grow? Many people must think that it grows on its head. In fact, the parts of insects' ears that grow are very peculiar.

    There are quite a few insects with ears that grow on their legs. The crickets we are familiar with, the ears of the Admiralty are all on the calves of a pair of forefeet; There are also insects that have even more amazing ears that grow. The ears of the locust grow on either side of the first abdominal segment of the abdomen, with a half-moon-shaped opening, a well-developed tympanic membrane, and an air sac equivalent to a resonator on the membrane; The ears of mosquitoes grow on the second segment of the antennae; The ears of the aphid grow on the basal ganglia of the base of the antennae; The ears of moths, some on the chest and some on the abdomen, and the ears of the male moth grow on the downy of the hairy antennae; The ears of the cicada grow underneath the abdomen; The ears of the flies grow behind the base of the wings.

    The ears of insects can listen to sounds, but not melody and rhyme. Many insects can hear ultrasound, and some can even hear ultrasound at a frequency of 200,000 times per second.

    The "ears" of flies and mosquitoes grow on their antennae-like antennae. They have a large number of extremely sensitive hairs on their antennae. These villi are so powerful that they vibrate even in the faintest sounds, transmitting sound signals to the brain through the Bible plexus at the end of the antennae.

    The "ear" of the moth is in a special position. Some are born in the chest, while others are born in the abdomen. Scientists have found that there is a kind of noctuidae whose abdomen is full of "ears" to defend against bats, and the wonderful thing is that each "ear" has only two cells, and the "ears" of the noctuidae rely on this "ear" to detect the ultrasound emitted by bats, so that they can slip away at any time.

    The "ear" of the weaver grows on the calf segment of each forefoot, and is a membrane invisible to the naked eye, which vibrates like a tympanic membrane to transmit sound wave information.

    Interestingly, the cicada's "ears" grow near the second segment of the abdomen and are made up of the eardrum. It is very sensitive to sounds made by its own kind, and cannot hear other sounds, even gunshots, and becomes deaf.

Related questions
7 answers2024-06-19

Go to a dark place, turn on the flashlight, and point the light source at the opening of the external auditory canal. >>>More

22 answers2024-06-19

It should be killed first, either by drowning it with glycerin or cooking oil in the external auditory canal, or by dripping it with 70% alcohol, anesthetizing it, and removing it with tweezers or rinsing it out. Pay attention to observe first, if there is no tinnitus after flying in, the small bugs may have died, and then you can take them out in the hospital; If you feel a bug flying or crawling, you should put alcohol into your ear canal to kill the insect and take it out to the hospital.

14 answers2024-06-19

The insect-free foot on the left side of the white character is Zhong. >>>More

14 answers2024-06-19

Just finished beating the centipede, found a trick: first of all, S switch the thunder attribute magic to hit the centipede's shell, to fight when he climbs the wall, be careful not to knock them off one by one, each shell can probably withstand more than 200 damage, you try a few more times, count the shell can hit how many times (for example, 7 times it will explode, you will hit 5 or 6 times) to beat his shell into close to empty blood in turn (you can see that the shell will be very broken), you go around it when he comes down, always keep an eye on his head around, let his head always be at the edge of the pillar, don't let his lightning strike you. When the shell is almost beaten, the wind change magic press V to hit the chicken blood. >>>More

3 answers2024-06-19

There is no fermentation and rotting to configure nutrient soil. >>>More