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  2. Nematode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nematode

    Nematodes are very small, slender worms. Most are free-living, often less than 2.5 mm long and some only about 1 mm. Many nematodes are microscopic. Some soil nematodes can reach up to 7 mm in length, and some marine species can reach up to 5 cm. Some are parasitic and can reach lengths of 50 cm or more. [42]

  3. Gyrinicola batrachiensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyrinicola_batrachiensis

    G. batrachiensis is a nematode that is a parasite of the gastrointestinal tract of herbivorous anuran species, specifically in posterior end of the small intestine and in the large intestine of the tadpole stage. [4] It is not seen in late-stage, metamorphosing tadpoles or in adult, carnivorous frogs.

  4. Bacterivore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacterivore

    A bacterivore is an organism which obtains energy and nutrients primarily or entirely from the consumption of bacteria.The term is most commonly used to describe free-living, heterotrophic, microscopic organisms such as nematodes as well as many species of amoeba and numerous other types of protozoans, but some macroscopic invertebrates are also bacterivores, including sponges, polychaetes ...

  5. Tritrophic interactions in plant defense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tritrophic_Interactions_in...

    Herbivores are believed to have evolved to evade detection on the part of the nematodes, whereas the plants have evolved to release highly attractive chemical signals. A high degree of specificity is involved; species that make up these tritrophic interactions have evolved with one another over a long period of time and as a result have close ...

  6. Nematoida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nematoida

    Nematoida is a clade of pseudocoelomate free living or parasitic animals.It consists of phyla Nematoda and Nematomorpha. [3] [4] The two groups share a number of features in common; the presence of a cloaca in both sexes, aflagellate sperm, and a cuticle made of collagen.

  7. Mermis nigrescens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mermis_nigrescens

    The newly hatched nematode is about 0.24 millimetres long; by day 37 it has reached about 5 centimetres. The nematodes grow more rapidly and attain larger sizes in larger insect hosts. More females occur in larger hosts, as well. The nematode is still a juvenile when it emerges from the host insect, and finishes its development in the soil.

  8. Entomopathogenic nematode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entomopathogenic_nematode

    If entomopathogenic nematodes suppress the population of insect root herbivores, they indirectly benefit plants by freeing them from grazing pressure. This is an example of a trophic cascade in which consumers at the top of the food web (nematodes) exert an influence on the abundance of resources (plants) at the bottom.

  9. Microbivory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microbivory

    [2] [3] [4] Microbivorous animals include some soil nematodes, [5] [6] [7] springtails or flies such as Drosophila sharpi. A well known example of microbivorous nematodes is the model roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans which is maintained in culture in labs on agar plates, fed with the 'OP50' Escherichia coli strain of bacteria.