Q: What is the difference between parasites and parasitoids?
A: The question here is asking about the differences between a parasite and parasitoids . These both…
Q: What is brood parasitism?Explain with the help of an example.
A: Parasitism is a type of symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits at the expense of…
Q: Contrast endoparasitism and ectoparasitism.
A: Hi! Thank you for the questions. As you have posted multiple questions, I will be answering the…
Q: What types of parasites are most likely to alter the behavior of their host to facilitate their…
A: Interactions between two species are broadly divided into three categories - Mutualism,…
Q: which of the following statements is true? a. in symniosis, one organism must benefit at the…
A: An ecosystem's biotic component is a culture. It is made up of all the populations of all the…
Q: What does it mean to be a disease hunter?
A: Hunter disease is a rare and inherited syndrome in which the body cannot properly digest the sugar…
Q: How does the parasite affect the host in a way that it hastens the progress of its life cycle
A: Introduction: The life cycle of all parasites is divided into three stages: growth, reproduction,…
Q: For question with blank, choose the combination of answers that most accurately completes the…
A: Malaria is a vector. borne infection caused by protists Plasmodium. There are various species of…
Q: Why are termites essential members of communities in nature? How do they alter habitats?
A: Termites are eusocial insects, which are believed to have evolved from cockroaches. They are also…
Q: What are two primary requirements of a parasite from host?
A: A type of biological interaction in which one animal/organism kills the other and eat is more…
Q: Why would a parasite develop a life cycle involving an intermediate hosts? What is this giving the…
A: Introduction: Parasites are organisms that depended on another life form, serving, for food,…
Q: Why are Cryptosporidium parvum and cryptosporidium hominis associated with water-borne outbreaks of…
A: Cryptosporidium can be found in the small intestine of most animals and humans. Infected people pass…
Q: what is the only known coccidial parasite that does not have intermediate hosts?
A: An organism that harbors the parasites with nourishment and space (as shelter) is considered a host.…
Q: How Parasites change their host’s behavior?
A: Parasitism is a type of interaction in which one partner is benefitted and the other is harmed due…
Q: The human or animal host infected by the adult stage of a parasite worm is an: a) Intermediate…
A: Introduction A parasite is a living thing that inhabits its host and feeds off of or at the expense…
Q: Why doesn’t the evolutionary history of Plasmodium follow the classical host–parasite co-speciation…
A: Co-speciation is a type of coevolution where the speciation of one species influences the speciation…
Q: a___ vector is something that participates during the life cycle of a parasite
A: The correct answer is . A Parasite Vector
Q: Describe one invertebrate endoparasite you find interesting and identify its definitive host (and…
A: According to guidelines we have to answer the first question only. so please kindly post the…
Q: What is the structural characteristic which makes may round worms survive as parasites inside the…
A: Parasites are those organisms which depend on other organism (host) to lead their life. The host…
Q: summarize basic information with photos: Family name, scientific name, common name, hosts/damage,…
A: The forest tent caterpillar moth is a moth found all through North America, particularly in the…
Q: why is evolutionarily advantages for most parasites to be monoecious ?
A: Parasite plant: 1% of angiosperms are parasitic.Parasitic plant is dependent on a host organism for…
Q: Which of the following is NOT a site colonized by normal microbiota in humans? Skin Brain and…
A: Skin is a site where many organisms stay physiologically such as Corynebacterium, Propionibacterium…
Q: Is there a common evolutionary pathway between host and parasite?
A: Introduction Microbes are not only pathogenic to humans but they are beneficial for Humans too.…
Q: What are some mechanisms that V. cholerae escapes from its own eradication should the disease prove…
A: *V cholerae is a comma-shaped bacteria *Cholera is an intestinal infection caused by Vibrio…
Q: What do you think happened to the mutations that decreased survival orreproduction of the parasites?
A: Population genetics is a branch of evolutionary biology, a subcategory under genetics that helps in…
Q: Which of the following symbiotic relationships is considered parasitic? O A. Birds eating the…
A: Organisms of one species tend to associate with species of other organisms. The relationship between…
Q: Why does a parasitic organism not have to be a parasite?
A: Parasite is an organism that lives in or on the body of other organisms and derive nutrients from…
Q: The parasite is capable ofindependent existence in addition to parasitic life. E.g.…
A: Parasites are those organism which feed and depends on the host body to obtain their nutrition.…
Q: In your own words and in 2 paragraphs: Explain how metamorphosis influences parasitism?
A: A parasite is an organism that lives in a host organism and gets its food from it or at the expense…
Q: Many species of hover flies have black and yellow coloration that closely resemble the coloration of…
A: Introduction A species is a group of animals, plants, or other living things that can reproduce…
Q: Many biologists consider a lichen an example of controlled parasitism. In this view, which component…
A: Introduction An ecosystem deals with both biotic and abiotic factors and their interaction with…
Q: Why are the larvae of Trichinella spiralis considered more dangerous than the adults
A: Trichinella spiralis is a parasitic nematode, infect and damage body tissues after ingestion. It…
Q: Do parasite-host systems tend to be host-specialist or generalist? Explain.
A: Parasites are organism that cannot survive on it's own. It lives on hosts. Hosts supports the…
Q: Describe the life cycle of Paragonimus westermani and its method of transmission to humans with…
A:
Q: provide example of a parasite that develop a life cycle involving an intermediate hosts? explain…
A: Introduction: A living thing is referred to as a host when it provides food and shelter for…
Q: What are the differences between direct and indirect life cycles? Give two (2) representative…
A: Parasites are the organisms which lives and reproduce inside other organisms known as host.
Q: If you are a community health worker, what would be your plans to combat parasitic nematodes?
A: Pathogenic microbes are they microbes which have ability to cause disease in the host . Pathogenic…
Q: Which of the following applies to Malaria? Choose all that apply. Group of answer choices It is a…
A: Disease is any state of any physiological deviation from being normal. Disease can be infectious or…
Q: The eukaryotic parasites of humans include two groups. Which one of these does not belong?
A: Eukaryotic organisms are more advanced organisms than prokaryotes. Eukaryotes have a membrane-bound…
Q: How does brood parasitism harm the hosts and benefit the parasite?
A: Brood parasitism refers to a phenomena where an organism of one species lays it eggs in nest of…
Q: Organism cannot exist without a host is?select the true option a. Facultative parasite b. Obligate…
A: Parasites an organism that lives on host or in host body.
Q: How would you classify the following organism? A flesh fly (Anolisomyia) whose larvae develop inside…
A: The condition in which flies lay eggs in vertebrates that act as hosts for the development of larvae…
Q: provide example of a parasite that develop a life cycle involving an intermediate hosts? explain
A: Introduction An organism that is infected by or consumed by a parasitic or pathogenic organism is…
Q: Google search your choice: Chestnut Blight in the Americas, Dutch Elm Disease or Smallpox in regards…
A: Smallpox is a disease that majorly affected the native American population in terms of mortality and…
Q: If the final or definitive host of a parasitic flatworm were eradicated, what would be the likely…
A: Definitive hosts are the organisms in which the adults of the parasite develop. Usually, the…
Q: Apicomplexans are widespread and common parasites of worms, echinoderms, insects, and vertebrates…
A: The Apicomplexans are unicellular and spore forming organisms in which all species are obligate…
Q: Malaria is a disease in humans caused by infection with a protist, a eukaryotic organism. What…
A: Malaria is caused by plasmodium parasite belongs to genus plasmodium.
Q: What is the origin of parasites?
A: Parasitism is a mutual connection between species in which one creature, the parasite, feeds upon or…
If the final or definitive host of a
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- Why is a complex life cycle involving multiple hosts often a characteristic of a parasite – why might it have evolved?Why do we have to use special techniques for the recovery of pinworm eggs? ExplainIs it more beneficial for Neodermata to have one host or two hosts? Neodermatahas two classes: class Trematoda and class Monogenea. Class Trematoda has the subclass Digenea, which has organisms that live through at least two different hosts. An example of this is Fasciola hepatica, the sheep's liver fluke. Class Monogenea has organisms that only need to live through one host. Is it better to have a simple or complex life cycle? Which lives longer? Has more energy? Does more damage or good?
- (a) What species of blood fluke causes Schistosomiasis in the Philippines? (b) What species of freshwater snail is its intermediate host?a. Why is it necessary for most parasites to leave their host tocomplete the life cycle?b. What are some ways to prevent completion of the life cycle?c. What is the benefit to parasites of having numerous hosts?d. What are the disadvantages in having more than one host?Why are the larvae of Trichinella spiralis considered more dangerous than the adults?
- Describe the symbiosis between the Riftia tubeworm and its bacterial symbiont. What is the role of the Riftia tube worm hemoglobin in the success of its relationship with the symbiotic bacteria?Which of the following summarizes the chronological sequence (earliest to latest) of discovery involving human malaria parasites? This is was in a lecture slide, but is also in the textbook. a) liver stages, blood stages, mosquito stages, experimental transmission by mosquito b) blood stages, mosquito stages, liver stages, experimental transmission by mosquito c) mosquito stages, blood stages, liver stages, experimental transmission by mosquito d) blood stages, mosquito stages, experimental transmission by mosquito, liver stages e) mosquito stages, liver stages, blood stages, experimental transmission by mosquitoWhy doesn’t the evolutionary history of Plasmodium follow the classical host–parasite co-speciation pattern?