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Parasitology~ EXAM 1 and answers

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Parasitology~ EXAM 1 and answers 1. Protozoa 2. Helminths (worms) 3. Arthropods (fleas, ticks, etc.)What are the three organisms that are considered parasites? ParasitismRelationship between host and parasite; in or on host and is taking nutrients or blood or other substances from h...

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  • October 17, 2024
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Parasitology~ EXAM 1 and answers
1. Protozoa
2. Helminths (worms)
3. Arthropods (fleas, ticks, etc.)✔✔What are the three organisms that are considered
parasites?

Parasitism✔✔Relationship between host and parasite; in or on host and is taking
nutrients or blood or other substances from host.

Hyperparasitism✔✔when a parasite is a host to another parasite

Pinworms
Giardiasis
Dog roundworms
Ticks✔✔what are some common parasites in the United States?

Travel
Immigration and Emigration✔✔______ transfers many parasites into the United
States.

visceral✔✔pertaining to organs

cutaneous✔✔pertaining to skin

Every animal and most plants contain at least one parasite✔✔How common are
parasites?

100% of organisms can be a host to a parasite.✔✔What percentage of organisms
can be hosts?

50% of organisms can be parasites

80% of organisms including bacteria can be parasites✔✔What percentage of
organisms are parasites?
What percentage of organisms including bacteria can be parasites?

370 species✔✔How many species can be parasites to humans?

Bacteria
Fungi
Plants
Protozoa
Animals✔✔What major groups of organisms are parasites found in?

symbiosis✔✔"living closely together", close relationship between two organisms

symbionts✔✔interacting organisms

,Phoresis✔✔travelling together; neither benefit or lose from the interaction.

Commensalism✔✔Relationship where one member benefits, other is unaffected

mutualism✔✔relationship where both members benefit

Parasitism✔✔a relationship where one member gains (parasite), and the other is
negatively (host) affected

slower population growth✔✔A larger organism results in .....

SImilarities:
-Both have (+,-) relationship
-
Differences
-Predator is larger than prey
-Parasite is smaller than host
-Predators have slower growth than prey population
-Parasite population size increases faster than the host population.
-Predator eats many prey
-Parasite uses 4 or less hosts to complete a generation (often very specific
interactions are involved)✔✔What are the similarities and differences between
predator and parasite relationships?

Mosquitoes, ticks, leeches, etc. are predators. They prey on many hosts or single
host intermittently.✔✔Give some examples of micropredators or intermittent
parasites.

Wasps and flies
adults are free-living
immature stages feed on hosts body (usually another insect)✔✔Give some
examples of parasitoids.

Ectoparasites✔✔Parasites that live on the body surface of host

Endoparasites✔✔Parasites that live on the inside of the body of the host

obligate parasites✔✔parasites that needs a host to survive

Facultative parasite✔✔parasites that normally free-living organisms that may
become parasitic.
The infection is usually fatal

accidental or incidental parasite✔✔parasites in the wrong host. In this case the
parasite does not usually survive

permanent parasite✔✔parasite that lives its entire life or life stage on or in one host

, temporary parasite✔✔a parasite that lives in or on several hosts during a life-cycle
stage

zoonotic parasite✔✔a parasite that normally develops in other animals, but can
infect humans

Definitive Host✔✔a host where the parasite reaches sexual maturity, or where the
parasite is most detrimental to humans

Intermediate host✔✔a required host, but maturity (sexual) does not occur here.
Usually asexual reproduction happens here

vector✔✔transmits parasite from one host to another

Paratenic Host✔✔parasite DOES NOT DEVELOP here, but remains infective to
another host

Example: Mammal Tapeworm

Mammal (definitive host) ->
crustacean (1st Intermediate host) ->
1st Fish (2nd Intermediate host)->
2nd Fish (Paratenic Host (No development))->
Mammal (definitive host)✔✔Give an example that shows a definitive host, two
intermediate hosts, and a paratenic host.

Reservoir Hosts (Zoonotic Hosts)✔✔a host that harbors an infection that can be
transmitted to humans. It may be normal hosts for non-specific parasites

Example: Rat Schistosome
human (definitive host)->
snail (1st intermediate host and vector)->
human or rat (reservoir host)->
snail....->✔✔Give an example that includes a reservoir host, two intermediate hosts,
a vector host, and a definitive host

parasite's development and transmission mode✔✔What do parasite life cycles
describe?

Monoxenous Life Cycle (direct)✔✔parasites complete life cycle within a single host.
The infective stage enters the host and the same stage leaves the host.

Heteroxenous Life Cycle (complex)✔✔the parasite requires several hosts to
complete its life cycle. This stage entering host differs from the stage leaving the
host.

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