From their hosts. The hosts may be plants, animals or even micro-organisms.
Parasites can limit the growth of a population. They take nourishment from their hosts, often weakening them and causing disease or death. As the population of parasites grow, the population of their hosts tend to decrease.
Parasites in a forest community can travel from host to host through various means, including direct contact between hosts, ingestion of infected hosts by predators or scavengers, and contamination of the environment with parasite eggs or larvae. Some parasites may also utilize intermediate hosts, such as insects or other animals, to transmit between primary hosts in the forest community.
well the host is the one that will end up dead
They tend to exist as parasites, living off other life forms
Dogs are not parasites because parasites suck the blood of other animals. Dogs are hosts to various parasites, such as ticks and fleas.
They don't.
No, most parasites do not kill their hosts. They rely on their hosts for survival and typically aim to keep them alive for as long as possible to continue feeding off them.
Yes
If they are successful then they don't.
Parasites feed off their hosts. Predators feed off their prey. Difference is that parasites want to keep their hosts alive so they can continue to feed off them.
From their hosts. The hosts may be plants, animals or even micro-organisms.
ectoparasites
Parasites can limit the growth of a population. They take nourishment from their hosts, often weakening them and causing disease or death. As the population of parasites grow, the population of their hosts tend to decrease.
Parasites can limit the growth of a population. They take nourishment from their hosts, often weakening them and causing disease or death. As the population of parasites grow, the population of their hosts tend to decrease.
Parasites can limit the growth of a population. They take nourishment from their hosts, often weakening them and causing disease or death. As the population of parasites grow, the population of their hosts tend to decrease.
Some examples of parasites that kill their hosts include parasitic wasps, liver flukes, and malaria parasites. When these parasites kill their hosts, it can disrupt the balance of the ecosystem by reducing the population of the host species. This can have cascading effects on other species that rely on the host for food or other resources, potentially leading to changes in the overall biodiversity and functioning of the ecosystem.