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2006-06-12 03:29:14 · 5 answers · asked by saumya_nick 1 in Education & Reference Trivia

5 answers

Yup!! Sure.. Blood is present even in insects but the colour of their blood is not red, its white.
In insects, the oxygen is directly absorbed and transported to all the cells in the body. They do not have haemoglobin. Thus, due to the lack of haemoglobin in their blood, their blood is white..

Hope this helps...

2006-06-12 03:34:47 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes insect has blood but hard to be seen

2006-06-19 02:56:07 · answer #2 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

I just killed a rather large fly last night, I smashed it with a shampoo bottle. It left a rather large blood spot on the bathroom counter. I was rather intrigued by the fact that the fly's blood appeared purple, similar to color of a crushed oregon grape, rather than red. It was not white!

2006-06-12 17:06:40 · answer #3 · answered by Bradly T Weatherford Jones 3 · 0 0

Sure. They extracted mosquito blood for the DNA to grow the dinosaurs in Jurrasic Park.

2006-06-13 01:08:00 · answer #4 · answered by mslider2 6 · 0 0

UHHH YES KILL ONE YOU WILL SEE OOOH KILL A MOSQUITO THY HAVE A LOT OF BLOOD OOOO WASH YOUR HANDS AFTERWARD VERY NASTY EWE

2006-06-12 10:33:10 · answer #5 · answered by jcleann13 4 · 0 0

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