Very broadly, some of the disease producing organisms that affect human beings are bacteria, viruses, fungi, certain helminthic parasites, and protozoa. A few specific examples of bacteria that are important causes of disease could include Streptococcus pneumoniae, haemophilus influenzae, staphylococcus aureus, and streptococcus pyogenes just to list a few. A few disease causing viruses that come to mind are Herpes Simplex Virus, Epstein-Barr Virus, cytomegalovirus, west nile virus, hantavirus, ebola virus, adenovirus, and rhinovirus. Some fungi that come to mind are Candida Albicans, aspergillus fumigatus, or histoplasma capsulatum to name a few. I hope this answered your question! These were listed in no particular order of importance and they were not listed by how commonly they cause disease, these were just what popped into my head at the moment. If you need more specific information like that, you'll have to do a bit more research! There are plenty of good resources for information like that as well.
no. an organism is any system of organs working together.
About two-thirds of animal bites are found to contain anaerobic disease-producing organisms
Two ways that pathogenic organisms can cause infection and disease is by producing poison and to attack and destroy the living cells they intrude.
PhagocytosisBy the process of phagocytosis.
Pathogenic means producing disease.
Nonpathogens are nonharmful and are not disease-producing microorganisms.
Pathologic is a commonly used term that means "disease-producing". For example, a bacterium that causes disease is commonly called a pathologic bacterium.Pathogenesis is the condition of producing disease.
Disease-producing bacteria come from the kingdom Bacteria.
Examples of parasitic organisms include ticks, fleas, tapeworms, and malaria-causing Plasmodium parasites. These organisms rely on a host organism for their survival and can cause harm or disease to their hosts.
"Examples of organisms in the starfish?"
They are usually just called organisms or bacteria, virus, pathogen, or parasites.
Non-disease-producing microorganisms are typically referred to as non-pathogenic. These microorganisms are usually harmless and do not cause disease in humans or other organisms. Some examples include certain species of bacteria, fungi, and protozoa that can be beneficial to humans, such as those involved in food fermentation or environmental nutrient cycling.