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Many species within the genus Mycoplasma thrive as parasites in human, bird, and animal hosts
No.
tick on a dog tapeworm in a human
No. It can't be
no
During the life cycle of a beef tapeworm, a human becomes the primary host.
Under all conditions within human experience. That is, all non-relativistic conditions.
tapeworm
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
No, there are many species of fungi all over the planet. They live in conditions that are very different. From rotting wood, to inside the human body!
Evolution of animal and plant species helps to explain mutations in geographical spaces as well as population density. An example would be the lack of human and plant growth in Antarctica due to extreme cold conditions. Human and plant tend to thrive in ideal conditions suitable for survival.
According to the researchers, the ancestors of the human species first got infected by tapeworms when they began consuming more of the worm-infested meat as hyenas and big cats did. They go on further to say that these studies are the first to connect human tapeworm infestations with increased scavenging of meat and hunting by human beings. Both humans and animals ingest newborn tapeworms regularly. The embryos of the tapeworm are ingested either by direct contact with infected feces, or by drinking contaminated water, or by eating the flesh of animals infected with tapeworm. For humans who have tapeworm infection, the parasite is the most dangerous when it is at the embryo stage, because an insidious infection called cysticercosis can develop. http://www.buzzle.com/articles/human-tapeworm-intestinal-parasite-infection.html