This is a parasite. A parasite lives , grows or shelters in another organism without benefit to that other organism.
They're not mutually contradictory. (The second is just environmental limitations.)
This is a parasite, the human pin worm.
no
cells are the building blocks of the human. they have nutrients inside of them and they keep your structure strong. they also transport materials if they are blood cells.
YES!! it hides in our cells
all the cells in the human body are human except bacteria and cells in food consumed for example ameobas and any type of parasite
A tape worm is a parasite that lives inside a humans intestines and bowels.
An infected female anopheles mosquito injects the parasite into a human. Once in the human, the parasite infects the liver and ruptures and multiplies, eventually infecting red blood cells. Once in the red blood cells, they rupture and multiply again. This stage is when disease manifests itself. At this point, once a mosquito lands on the human and drinks the blood, the parasites repopulate in the mosquito and the cycle begins again.
First is liver and second is red blood cells. It will be interesting to know that the parasite frequently changes the liver cells, before settling in finally.
This is a parasite. A parasite lives , grows or shelters in another organism without benefit to that other organism.
They're not mutually contradictory. (The second is just environmental limitations.)
Cells inside your body
viruses replicate inside respiratory cells.
This is a parasite, the human pin worm.
no
A female Anopheles mosquito carrying the malaria-causing parasites bites a human and injects the parasites in the form of sporozoites into the bloodstream. The sporozoites travel to the liver and then invade the liver cells. These mature into schizonts, which rupture and release merozoites. This form of the malaria parasite invades red blood cells.