No. The egg (nit) is glued onto the base of the hair, near your scalp. It can't fall off accidentally. When it hatches (becomes a nymph), it needs to feed several times per day from the scalp (by sucking blood). An adult head louse can not live away from the human head for more than a couple of days at most, so newly hatched baby lice would have almost no chance of survival without a supply of blood to eat even if they did hatch off the head.
They lay eggs (more lice)
Yes body lice lay their eggs in the body hair
Once children have lice in their hair, they will keep them until treated. The lice process is: adult lice transfer from one head to another, the female lice lay eggs, the eggs hatch within 7 days the baby lice grow, they lay eggs and the whole process repeats itself.
If your hair is clean, lice crawl up into your hair and start to live in your hair (like a hotel) and lay eggs.
Body lice lay their eggs in the seams and folds of clothing, rather than directly on the body. The eggs hatch into nymphs which then feed on the host's blood and return to the clothing to lay their own eggs. Regular washing of clothes and bedding is essential to prevent body lice infestations.
no they dont there is no way only female lice lay nits in your hair.
yes. they lay little eggs called nits in your hair.
Yes, eggs (nits) are the eggs laid by lice and can survive even if the lice have been removed. Nits can still hatch and develop into new lice if not completely removed from the hair or clothing.
Lice typically lay 6-10 eggs (nits) per day. These eggs are usually attached to the hair shaft close to the scalp.
If your hair is clean, lice crawl up into your hair and start to live in your hair (like a hotel) and lay eggs.
lice are insects. people who have lice comb their hair and little lice eggs/larvae get left on the comb. they wear a hat it gets stuck on the hat. when someone else uses the comb/hat, the eggs/larvae get left on their scalp, hatch, and reproduce
there is crabs and they crawl in your pubic hairs and lay eggs.