Saw this movie on a weblog today, I thought it was creepy and interesting at the same time.
creepy! Don't know what language it is..
I've looked up some information about these parasites, Check >>THIS<< movie: They produce hormones so they can control their host! They make the host suicide so they can leave the body to mate and reproduce. Just like some sort of alien
And some additional information:
creepy! Don't know what language it is..
I've looked up some information about these parasites, Check >>THIS<< movie: They produce hormones so they can control their host! They make the host suicide so they can leave the body to mate and reproduce. Just like some sort of alien
And some additional information:
wikipedia wrote:
Nematomorpha (sometimes called Gordiacea, and commonly known as Horsehair worms or Gordian worms) are a phylum of parasitic animals which are morphologically and ecologically similar to nematode worms, hence the name. They are, on average, 1 meter long, and 1 to 3 millimetres in diameter. Horsehair worms can be discovered in damp areas such as watering troughs, streams, puddles, and cisterns. The adult worms are free living, but the larvae are parasitic on beetles, cockroaches, grasshoppers and crustaceans. About 320 species have been described.
Nematomorphs possess an external cuticle without cilia. Internally, they have only longitudinal muscle and a non-functional gut, with no excretory, respiratory or circulatory systems. Reproductively, they are dioecious, with the internal fertilization of eggs that are then laid in gelatinous strings.
In Spinochordodes tellinii, which has grasshoppers as its vector, the infection acts on the grasshopper's brain and causes it to seek water and drown itself, thus returning the nematomorph to water. They are also remarkably able to survive the predation of their host, being able to wriggle out of the predator which has eaten the host cricket.
Relationships within the phylum are still somewhat unclear, but two classes are recognised:
* Class Nectonematoida: Marine, planktonic, with a double row of natotory setae along each side of the body; with dorsal and ventral longitudinal epidermal cords, blastocoelom spacious and fluid filled; gonads single; larvae parasitise decapod crustaceans
* Class Gordioidea: Freshwater and semiterrestrial; lack lateral rows of setae; with a single, ventral epidermal cord; blastocoelom filled with mesenchyme in young animals but becomes spacious in older individuals; larvae parasitise grasshoppers and crickets
Last edited by ']['error (2007-12-14 06:31:56)