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This endoparasite obtains nutrients by burrowing into the skin of the host.
It is a migratory endoparasite of roots.
S. baccatum is a marine hermaphroditic endoparasite that feeds on its host.
This lack of features is an adaptation to a food-rich environment, such as within rotting organic matter, or as an endoparasite.
The migratory endoparasite enters the root by puncturing a hole in an outside cell with its stylet.
M. ozzardi is an endoparasite that inhabits the serous cavity of the abdomen in the human host.
Corallovexia brevibrachium, Stock 1975 is both an ectoparasite and an endoparasite.
Another endoparasite is scabies, caused by Sarcoptes scabiei.
M. enterolobii, a sedentary endoparasite, has very similar morphology as other species of Meloidogyne.
Schistosomes, another type of endoparasite, also live inside the body of the host but instead these parasites acquire their nutrients from host blood.
The parasitic copepod Asterocheres boecki is an endoparasite of the black sea cucumber.
D. dipsaci is a migratory endoparasite that has a five-stage life cycle and the ability to enter into a dormancy stage.
Malaria, caused by the apicomplexan parasite Plasmodium falciparum, is an intracellular endoparasite.
This endoparasite causes a condition often called strongylosis or 'grouse disease' and which can be the cause of regular crashes in grouse populations.
Telogaster opisthorchis is an endoparasite in the class Trematoda within the phylum Platyhelminthes.
Thompsonia is a genus of barnacle which has evolved into an endoparasite of other crustaceans, including crabs and snapping shrimp.
The larva lives it in its first instars as an endoparasite, and later exits the host and lives on the remaining host tissues.
It is suspected to act as a facultative endoparasite of the larvae of the Culex, Aedes, and Anopheles mosquito larva.
It is an endoparasite of the mummichog, Fundulus heteroclitus, a small fish found in brackish water along the east coast of the United States and Canada.
Opius concolor (Braconidae) is an endoparasite of various Diptera Tefritidi including B. oleae.
This endoparasite is often eaten with the tops of young heather shoots and can lead to mortality and poor condition, including a decrease in the bird's ability to control the scent it emits.
In a study of 105 juvenile Robins, 77.1% were infected with one or more species of endoparasite, with Syngamus species the most commonly encountered, found in 57.1% of the birds.
In response to a parsitoid egg or larvae in the caterpillar's body, the plasmatocytes, or simply the host's cells can form a multilayered capsule that eventually cause the endoparasite to asphyxiate, and die.
In recent decades the practice of using of medicated grit and direct dosing of birds against an endoparasite, the strongyle worm or Threadworm ('Thrichostrongylus tenuis'), has become part of the management regime on many moors.