ectoparasitism
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characteristics of braconid wasp
- In braconid wasp: Natural history and parasitism
…living within their hosts, or ectoparasitic, living on their hosts. Endoparasitic adult females lay an egg or eggs in the larvae or eggs of the host (braconid wasps do not typically exploit adult hosts). Many species are egg-larval parasitoids, meaning the wasp eggs are laid within the host eggs but…
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definition
- In parasitism
Parasites may be characterized as ectoparasites—including ticks, fleas, leeches, and lice—which live on the body surface of the host and do not themselves commonly cause disease in the host; or endoparasites, which may be either intercellular (inhabiting spaces in the host’s body) or intracellular
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effect on plant roots
- In plant disease: Nematode diseases
Many important ectoparasites feed on plant roots—dagger nematodes (Xiphinema), stubby-root nematodes (Trichodorus), spiral nematodes (Rotylenchus and Helicotylenchus), sting nematodes (Belonolaimus), and pin nematodes (Paratylenchus). Leaf, or foliar, nematodes (Aphelenchoides species) and bulb and stem nematodes (Ditylenchus dipsaci) cause severe losses in vegetable and ornamental bulb crops, clovers
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life cycle of Platyhelminthes
- In flatworm: Development
…majority of the Monogenea are ectoparasitic (externally parasitic) on fish. The eggs hatch in water. The larva, known as an oncomiracidium, is heavily ciliated (has actively moving hairlike projections) and bears numerous posterior hooks. It must attach to a host before it can grow and mature. In some species (e.g.,…
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