The scientific or taxonomic name would be Epipyropidae.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Cyclotornidae.
It depends on the parasite. Some parasites are insects, some parasites are plants, some are animals....it just depends on the type of parasite you mean.
Parasite do not have a single scientific name. The scientific name for a parasite depends on the specific species of parasite in question. However, parasites are organisms that live on or in a host organism and obtain nutrients from that host.
A flea.
The scientific name of the parasite that causes amoebiasis is Entamoeba histolytica.
The host is the organism for which a parasite lives off of.
Viewed scientifically a thief might be described as a social parasite.
Cuscuta reflexa is the scientific name of dodder plant. It is a total parasite and nourishes from the host plant through haustoria.
The scientific name for pinworm is Enterobius vermicularis.
The scientific name of the dodder plant is Cuscuta.
RINGWORM is in fact not a parasite, but a fungi. The scientific term for Ringworm is "Tinea" which means "growing worm". (thus here is the origin of the worm part of ringworm, ring is obviously the shape in which the fungi grows, in a circle) It is a common mistake to think that ringworm is a parasite. but it is in fact a fungi.
It is a parasite - host relationship. The fleas as parasites living off of the dog as a host.