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  2. Flatworm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flatworm

    Free-living flatworms are mostly predators, and live in water or in shaded, humid terrestrial environments, such as leaf litter. Cestodes (tapeworms) and trematodes (flukes) have complex life-cycles, with mature stages that live as parasites in the digestive systems of fish or land vertebrates , and intermediate stages that infest secondary hosts.

  3. Pseudoceros dimidiatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudoceros_dimidiatus

    All divided flatworms have a black body with an orange margin. Common characters are also two wide longitudinal yellow-greenish stripes usually separated by a narrow black median line. However, this species of Pseudoceros is highly variable in colour and in pattern, in terms of the arrangement and width of the various transverse stripes and of ...

  4. Pseudocerotidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudocerotidae

    Pseudocerotidae is a family of flatworms which includes the Bedford's flatworm. Pseudocerotidae are simple organisms categorized by their oval bodies and tentacles [7] and bright colors. They use the cilia to glide along surfaces. [8] Most commonly referred to as marine flatworms, closely related to the orders Macrostomorpha and Lecithoepitheliata.

  5. List of parasites of humans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_parasites_of_humans

    Main article: Human parasite Endoparasites Protozoan organisms Common name of organism or disease Latin name (sorted) Body parts affected Diagnostic specimen Prevalence Source/Transmission (Reservoir/Vector) Granulomatous amoebic encephalitis and Acanthamoeba keratitis (eye infection) Acanthamoeba spp. eye, brain, skin culture worldwide contact lenses cleaned with contaminated tap water ...

  6. Bipalium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bipalium

    Bipalium species are predatory.Some species prey on earthworms, while others may also feed on mollusks. [10] [11] These flatworms can track their prey. [12]When captured, earthworms begin to react to the attack, but the flatworm uses the muscles in its body, as well as sticky secretions, to attach itself to the earthworm to prevent escape.

  7. Polycladida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polycladida

    The Polycladida [1] represents a highly diverse clade of free-living marine flatworms. They are known from the littoral to the sublittoral zone (extending to the deep hot vents), and many species are common from coral reefs. Only a few species are found in freshwater habitats.

  8. Thysanozoon nigropapillosum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thysanozoon_nigropapillosum

    Thysanozoon nigropapillosum is quite common along the external reef in the shallow sub-tidal zone. It can swim by undulating and rhythmically contracting the body margins. It feeds on tunicates, using its mouth and large pharynx to engulf Didemnum spp., and later regurgitates food pellets containing the calcareous spicules present in their tunic

  9. Marine worm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_worm

    Marine deep sea polychaetes under the genus Osedax will colonize at whale falls in many different oceans, using a symbiont that can digest the bones within the carcasses (Jones et al,2007) This earned them the common name of "boneworms," and they are speculated to be a keystone species of these types of environments due to lack of organisms in ...