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Ticks are parasitic arachnids of the order Ixodida. They are part of the mite superorder Parasitiformes. Adult ticks are approximately 3 to 5 mm in length depending on age, sex, species, and "fullness". Ticks are external parasites, living by feeding on the blood of mammals, birds, and sometimes
Parasitic insect stubs (2 C, 69 P) Pages in category "Parasitic insects" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect ...
Stylopidae is a family of twisted-winged insects in the order Strepsiptera. There are about 15 genera and more than 330 described species in Stylopidae. [1] [2] [3] Members of Stylopidae are parasitic insects. Host insects of this family that are afflicted are referred to as being "stylopized". [4]
These can be categorized into three groups; cestodes, nematodes and trematodes.Examples include: Acanthocephala; Ascariasis (roundworms); Cestoda (tapeworms) including: Taenia saginata (human beef tapeworm), Taenia solium (human pork tapeworm), Diphyllobothrium latum (fish tapeworm) and Echinococcosis (hydatid tapeworm)
A planidium is a specialized form of insect larva seen in the first-instar of a few families of insects that have parasitoidal ways of life. They are usually flattened, highly sclerotized (hardened), and quite mobile. The function of the planidial stage is to find a host on which the later larval instars may feed, generally until the insect ...
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The Cimicidae are a family of small parasitic bugs that feed exclusively on the blood of warm-blooded animals. They are called cimicids or, loosely, bed bugs, though the latter term properly refers to the most well-known member of the family, Cimex lectularius, the common bed bug, and its tropical relation Cimex hemipterus. [2]
Many insects are parasitic. The largest group, with over 100,000 species [147] and perhaps over a million, [148] consists of a single clade of parasitoid wasps among the Hymenoptera. [149] These are parasites of other insects, eventually killing their hosts. [147] Some are hyper-parasites, as their hosts are other parasitoid wasps.