No, a bearded fire worm is not a parasite. It is a type of marine bristle worm belonging to the family Amphinomidae and is typically found in coral reefs and rocky environments. While it can have a harmful effect on other marine organisms due to its painful bristles, it primarily feeds on detritus and organic matter rather than living off a host like a parasite would.
No, a bearded fireworm (not "firework") is not a parasite. It is a type of marine bristleworm that inhabits coral reefs and is known for its distinctive bristles and feeding habits. Bearded fireworms primarily feed on detritus and organic matter rather than living off a host organism like parasites do.
known as a parasite or tape worm
Strongyloides is a parasite, specifically a nematode roundworm that can infect humans and animals. It is not a bacteria, toxin, or virus.
The answer is parasitism, because parasites harm their host.
The description matches that of a horsehair worm, a type of parasitic worm that infects insects during their larval stage. Once mature, the horsehair worm emerges from the host to reproduce in water, often displaying the behavior described to find a suitable environment. These worms are harmless to humans and animals.
Photosynthesis
it is not.
A tape worm is a parasite.
no
yeah
no
Annelida phylum
i think that it is a worm
there the coolest parasite ever dude
Heartworms are a parasite that infects dog through the bite of an mosquito carrying a larval form of the parasite. The immature parasite then migrates to the heart and matures into a worm up to 13" in length.
i need to know if the vinegar lee is a parasite and if what phylum the hook worm is
If the parasite you are thinking about is a tape worm, then this lives in the host animal's intestinal tract.