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Food products and household items commonly handled by humans can be toxic to dogs. The symptoms can range from simple irritation to digestion issues, behavioral changes, and even death. The categories of common items ingested by dogs include food products, human medication, household detergents, indoor and outdoor toxic plants, and rat poison. [1]
Brome Mosaic Virus Isolates Naturally Infecting Commelina diffusa and C. communis; Mosaic Disease of Rhoeo discolor Caused by a Strain of Tobacco Mosaic Virus; Tobacco mild green mosaic virus(U2-TMV) A Lethal Disease of Tomato Experimentally Induced by RNA-5 Associated with Cucumber Mosaic Virus Isolated from Commelina from El Salvador
Selamectin, sold under the brand name Revolution, among others, is a topical parasiticide and anthelminthic used on dogs and cats. [2] It treats and prevents infections of heartworms, fleas, ear mites, sarcoptic mange (scabies), and certain types of ticks in dogs, and prevents heartworms, fleas, ear mites, hookworms, and roundworms in cats.
While many dog owners know that giving Fido chocolate can causing poisoning, there other lesser known foods that need to be kept away from your dog. 9 types of food you should never feed your dog ...
The purported variety Commelina communis var. hortensis, which is apparently a cultivated form of another putative variety, namely Commelina communis var. ludens, is grown for its larger petals which yield a blue juice used in manufacturing a paper called boshigami or aigami (藍 紙), [3] which is the famous product of the Yamada village in ...
This is an alphabetically ordered list of Commelina species. The list includes all species accepted as of September 2014 [update] by the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families . [ 1 ]
C. communis may refer to: Catocala communis , a synonym for Catocala neogama , the bride, a moth of the family Noctuidae Commelina communis , the Asiatic dayflower, an herbaceous annual plant in the dayflower family
Commelina mosaic virus was first reported in 1977 and was the first Potyvirus found infecting a member of the plant family, Commelinaceae (2). Since then, two, possibly three, other potyviruses have been reported to infect members of this family, Tradescantia mosaic virus (=Tradescantia/Zebrina virus), [8] Aneilema virus (3) and Tradescantia mild mosaic virus [9]