Tapeworms are hardly "useful". Indeed a tapeworm infestation is a serious medical condition leading to malnutrition as the worm diverts one's food into its own tissues.
The worm hangs onto the intestinal wall by a head called a scolex, and buds off segments containing eggs, that are released in the stool.
These segments can be seen and look something like cucumber seeds. Fortunately by means of a suitable vermicide, a tapeworm infestation is easily cured.
But of course the best approach is not to become infected in the first place. The most common source is "measly beef" and poorly cooked pork, that is beef or pork that contains tapeworm cysts. Fortunately in the western world, meat production is closely supervised, and measily meat is a rarity.
Humans can also accidentally contract tapeworms from wild rats and mice, fish, and a common one is the dog tapeworm. This can be transferred by an infected dog licking one's face.
The worst is when a human acts as a secondary host to the hydatids tapeworm. This produces huge cysts in the body and even the brain, and have to be removed by major surgery.
The best way to prevent this is to have dogs regularly treated for worms, and never feed dogs sheep offal, which is the tissue most commonly favoured by the worm cysts.
In advanced agricultural countries it is a criminal offense to do so, and working dogs must be regularly treated by law, because a cyst in a human is absolutely devastating.
They eat your food before you do ... sometimes to the point of malnutrition.
No, stomach acids do not kill tapeworms. Tapeworms are adapted to the environment of the alimentary canal; if they were not, there would be no tapeworms.
Tapeworms are a kind of flatworm. Most flatworms are not tapeworms.
Tapeworms are of the class Cestoda of the phylum Platyhelminthes.
Yes tapeworms are in cookiedough but you have a very small chance of getting tapeworms from eating it...
Tapeworms are part of the phylum platyhelminthes. They are long, flat, parasitic worms that are adapted to life inside the intestines of their hosts. Tapeworms are the simplest animals to have three embryonic germ layers, bilateral symmetry and cephalization. They are NOT annelids because that phylum consists of animals with segmented bodies that are separated by septa. Each segment performs special functions. Most annelids reproduce sexually, while tapeworms reproduce asexually by fission.
TAPEWORMS
No. tapeworms are pest to humans.
Because of environmental contamination. Tapeworms shed eggs into the environment and those eggs then turn into the next generation of tapeworms. Treatment of tapeworms with medication only kill the adult tapeworms currently residing in that animal, but the environment and other animals remain a source of eggs and adult tapeworms.
NO there are no tapeworms at mt. rainier.
No. Tapeworms are not arthropods. They do not have an exoskeleton. They are flatworms in the phylum platyhelminthes.
YES