You defidently don't want to eat ticks. Ticks make you sick by putting blood of a sick animal in your blood stream. If you eat one, you are at a risk of getting sick from the bloog stored in their bodies.
If you mean parasitism, yes, there are plenty of that around. Example of this is the symbiotic relationship between a tick and its host. While the tick benefits by the blood it receives, the host mammal loses blood, and is often becoming infected by the contaminated tick.
deer tick
A wood tick is not an herbivore. It is a parasite that sucks blood.
There is no such species such as a "sea tick". There is what people have nicknamed a "Seed tick". Although it is not a pecies but instead a stage the tick goes through. Here are the three stages.# Larvae - "seed ticks" # Nymphs (After Molting)# Adults Tick So the answer to the question is a SEED Tick is a baby tick freshly hatched.They are about the size of the dot that is left after you put a period on a piece of paper with a normal size pencil. So the answer to the question is a SEED Tick is a baby tick freshly hatched.They are about the size of the dot that is left after you put a period on a piece of paper with a normal size pencil.
The black legged tick (or deer tick) carry Lyme's.
Tick tick tick tick kaboom, bad sound, mine finally went to the oil pan when passing a cop
bad, ticks are parasites.
its bad cause it talks about drinking and partying
Probably not, you should be more worried about your mental health, though.
Nothing is bad about eating slowly.In fact, it is better than eating quickly.no
no
It could.It could.
The duration of ...tick...tick...tick... is 1.67 hours.
e.g. Tick, tick, tick, tick, tick, tick... BOOM!
The only bad thing about healthy eating is that it suppresses your appetite's freedom.
get the paper and put it long ways then get a ruler divide it into 3es if cant to bad then tick the divied area then fold the tick marks
If you mean parasitism, yes, there are plenty of that around. Example of this is the symbiotic relationship between a tick and its host. While the tick benefits by the blood it receives, the host mammal loses blood, and is often becoming infected by the contaminated tick.