they live in the liver
Leeches are not bugs (insects). Leeches are animals, segmented worms in the same phylum (Annelida) as earthworms. Although insects do have a larval (worm-like) stage of their development, worms are not related to insects. After the larval stage, insects later develop legs and exoskeletons. Leeches and worms have neither exoskeleton nor legs at any stage of their lives. The larval stage of insects leads to the common misconception that they are related to worms, but this is not the case.
First of all it is spelled trichinella. Trichinella is the genus of parasitic roundworms of the phylum Nematoda that cause trichinosis. Members of this genus are often called trichinella.
The fish must have been saying, "No thank you, I had Catawba Worms for breakfast."The Catawba Worms are actually the larval stage of the Catalpa Sphinx (Ceratornia catalpae), which is a hawk moth of the Sphingidae family.
Glowworms generally have a lifespan of about 6-12 months as adults, during which they primarily focus on reproduction. The larval stage can last up to two years before they transform into adult glowworms.
that's what I've heard, the grub is actually the larva stage of the June bug and not a worm
Trichinella spiralis
No. Worms are hatched from a cocoon as tiny worms - there is no larval stage.
Yes, they can have large white roundworms, red stomach worms, whip worms, thread worms, kidney worms, zipper tapeworms, nodule worms, lungworms, thorn-headed worms, and Trichinella worms, among others.
No. Caterpillars are the larval stage of Moths and Butterflies.
Being in a worm like state ex. maggots, caterpillars, silk worms...
Yes; it is a larva of an insect.
Roundworms are a member of the nemathelminths phylum or group of animals. The hookworm, pinworm and trichinella are part of this group. They are more advanced than flatworms but less advanced than earthworms. They have thin round bodies, with none of the pieces or segments that earthworms have in their bodies.Roundworms live in salt water, fresh water and the soil. Many of them are harmful to man as they are parasites.I hope this helped and wasn't too complicated.
Worms belong to the Phylum Annelida. They are 'annelids'.
Leeches are not bugs (insects). Leeches are animals, segmented worms in the same phylum (Annelida) as earthworms. Although insects do have a larval (worm-like) stage of their development, worms are not related to insects. After the larval stage, insects later develop legs and exoskeletons. Leeches and worms have neither exoskeleton nor legs at any stage of their lives. The larval stage of insects leads to the common misconception that they are related to worms, but this is not the case.
Bougainvillea looper caterpillars appear among the yellow larval worms that eat amaranth leaves in Florida. The larval stage grows up to be a fast-flying brown or gray moth. The egg, larval, pupal and mature stages of Disclisioprocta stellata generally prove not to be problematic since only the caterpillar preys upon the leaf edges of amaranth, boungainvillea, devil's claw and pokeweed.
Trichinella spiralis belongs to the kingdom Animalia.
A Roundworm or Nematode has a "tube" like body within a tube, with a fluid- filled cavity in between the tubes.Most nematodes are parasites, such as ascarids, filarids, pinworms, hookworms, and whipworms.