Parasitism is a type of relationship in nature where one organism benefits while the other is harmed.
𧬠Definition
Parasitism
Parasitism is a biological interaction in which a parasite lives on or inside a host, taking nutrients or resources from it and usually causing harm.
πͺ± How it works
- π Parasite = benefits (gets food/shelter)
- π§ Host = gets harmed (loses nutrients or health)
The parasite usually does not kill the host immediately, because it depends on it for survival.
π§« Examples of parasitism
π In animals/humans
- Tapeworms in intestines
- Mosquitoes feeding on blood
- Lice on scalp
- Malaria parasite in blood
πΏ In plants
- Dodder plant (Cuscuta) growing on other plants
- Mistletoe drawing nutrients from trees
βοΈ Key features
- One benefits, one is harmed
- Parasite depends on host for survival
- Relationship is usually long-term
- Can weaken but not always kill the host
π§ Difference from other relationships
- π’ Mutualism: both benefit (e.g., bees and flowers)
- π‘ Commensalism: one benefits, other is not affected
- π΄ Parasitism: one benefits, one is harmed
π§Ύ Simple summary
Parasitism is a βtake-and-harmβ relationship in nature, where the parasite survives by living off a host organism.
If you want, I can also explain:
𧬠Parasites in humans and how they spread
π§« Life cycle of common parasites (like malaria)
π§ Difference between parasite, virus, and bacteria in simple terms