Yes, a tapeworm is an organism.
a tapeworm is a parasite. a parasite is an organism that lives off another organism.
The tapeworm feeds off the host organism and hurts this body. This means the tapeworm benefits, but the host organism is hurt from the rlationship.
The head of a tapeworm. Point of attachement to the host organism.
a tapeworm is neither, it is a living organism which lives in the intestine. but if any, it COULD be classed as a virus.
Yes it feeds of the things the other organism eats.
Heterotrophic- it feeds off the food that is ingested by the organism.
An adult tapeworm uses its scolex to chew through the tissue of the organism its living in.
No it is a parasite which needs another organism in order to survive a predator hunts and eats food
one organism gets something useful, and the other doesnt
No. ----------------------------------------parasitism the worm takes all the nutrients The dog does not benefit but the tapeworm does. The tapeworm steals nutrition from the dog and provides no benefit in return. In this case the dog can die from no nutrition
Nope actually, a tapeworm is a parasite. A parasite can only survive inside a host organism, it feeds off of the nutrients of this host. Most worms are parasites, which is why they cause so many problems for the humans they live in. Decomposer's however, such as fungus, secrete digestive juices on a nearby organism and absorb it's nutrients.
A tapeworm in a dog is called the same thing, a tapeworm. The most common kind of tapeworm found in dogs is the Dipylidium Caninum, which is the cucumber tapeworm or double-pore tapeworm.