Mosquitos infected by the malaria parasite are more likely to land on and probe a substrate laced with human body odor than their uninfected counterparts.
Mosquitos infected by the malaria parasite are more likely to land on and probe a substrate laced with human body odor than their uninfected counterparts.
Two species of songbirds pack their nests with scavenged cigarette butts that repel irksome parasites.
A parasitic worm accumulates epigenetic DNA tags over its lifetime.
Global trade in live bullfrogs and a more volatile, changing climate worsen a deadly amphibian fungus.
Fossilized fleas dating as far back as 165 million years provide clues of early flea evolution.
Fruit flies consume alcohol to kill off parasites.
Examples of parasites that manipulate the behavior of their hosts are not hard to come by, but scientists have only recently begun to understand how they induce such dramatic changes.
Wasps inject their larvae into ladybug abdomens, where they feast on the bugs’ insides.
The widespread bacteria known to manipulate host reproductive output can do so by ramping up stem cell division and consequent egg production in Drosophila.