Maybe in the future. Most wormholes collapse before anything can fully pass through it.
Worm holes have not been discovered.
No,
The answer you're looking for is a Worm.
there two different things
they look like worm holes but even bigger. they are in space
They could, but only if you can enter it without being torn to shreds by the gravitational tides.
Totally unknown, mainly because we don't even know if worm-holes actually exist.
Some worms are able to drill holes into the developing acorns to lay their larvae such as the weevil worms. From there, the larvae will hatch inside the acorn, feeding on the nutmeat for three weeks.
By sliding right through the holes. (With the help of their slime.)
Theoretically a worm hole could do this.
worm
Current thinking has it that they don't exist. None have ever been observed, and most basic models of worm holes are unstable (they would collapse very quickly). There are some models which do allow for worm holes, but those models have not yet been accepted as true by most physicists; they are mainly models which ultimately aspire to become theories of everything and in order for worms holes to be stable they have to allow for certain exotic particles which are not currently part of the Standard Model of particle physics.