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  2. Indian Runner duck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Runner_duck

    Indian Runners are a breed of Anas platyrhynchos domesticus, the domestic duck. They stand erect like penguins and, rather than waddling, they run. The females can lay as many as 300 to 350 eggs a year. They were bred on the Indonesian islands of Lombok, Java and Bali. These ducks do not fly and only rarely form nests and incubate their own eggs.

  3. Human feces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_feces

    Human feces photographed in a toilet, shortly after defecation.. Human feces (American English) or faeces (British English), commonly and in medical literature more often called stool, [1] are the solid or semisolid remains of food that could not be digested or absorbed in the small intestine of humans, but has been further broken down by bacteria in the large intestine.

  4. Feces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feces

    After the meconium, the first stool expelled, a newborn's feces contains only bile, which gives it a yellow-green color. Breast feeding babies expel soft, pale yellowish, and not quite malodorous matter; but once the baby begins to eat, and the body starts expelling bilirubin from dead red blood cells, its matter acquires the familiar brown color.

  5. They are avid foragers that eat a wide variety of things like slugs, mosquitoes, snails, grass, wild greens, and small fish and crustaceans. Runner ducks aren't like other domestic ducks. They're ...

  6. Intestinal parasite infection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intestinal_parasite_infection

    Due to the wide variety of intestinal parasites, a description of the symptoms rarely is sufficient for diagnosis. Instead, medical personnel use one of two common tests: they search stool samples for the parasites, or apply an adhesive to the anus to search for eggs.

  7. Kato technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kato_technique

    It was developed in 1954 by Japanese medical laboratory scientist Dr. Katsuya Kato (1912–1991). [6] [7] The technique was modified for use in field studies in 1972 by a Brazilian team of researchers led by Brazilian parasitologist Naftale Katz (b.1940), [8] [9] and this modification was adopted by the WHO as a gold standard for multiple helminth infections.

  8. Pet Duck Hops for Joy Over Mealtime and It’s ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/pet-duck-hops-joy-over-130000049.html

    Free-range runner ducks can fend for themselves; they are avid foragers that eat a wide variety of things like slugs, mosquitoes, snails, grass, wild greens, and small fish and crustaceans.

  9. Capillaria hepatica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capillaria_hepatica

    Identification of C. hepatica eggs in the stool does not result from infection of the human host, but from ingestion by that host of livers from infected animals, the eggs will then pass out harmlessly in the feces. [1] Most cases have been determined after death because clinical symptoms resemble those of numerous liver disorders. [1]