Never thought SD.net would be discussing what I've been doing for my postgrad research these last two years! And coincidentally I just gave my PhD proposal talk two hours ago!Dennis Toy wrote:"WE Seek peace-ful co-existance" ( A cookie for anyone who gets the reference )
I perfer headcrabs myself. I never thought parasites that controlled the brains of insects existed. I knew of insects who grew inside other incests and bursted out when matured.
( This is where Ridley scott claimed the idea for Alien came from )
Well, actually, that's the "ordinary" bit, the parasitoid wasp you are thinking of actually coerce its host into protecting it. When they start coming out of the host and form cocoons, the caterpillar stays alive for a little while longer and actually spins a protective web over the cocoons and sit on it, guarding them against predators and hyperparasitoid (yes, there are parasites that parasitised other parasites) until they hatch.
Just briefly, the worm that give those snails the funky pulsating eyestalks belongs to the Leucochloridium genus, the one that cause ants to crawl to the tip of grass blades and hang out for a rendezvous with a sheep is Dicrocoelium dendriticum, there's another fluke with the long and somewhat embarassing species name of Microphallus papillorobustus that changes the phototaxis and geotaxis behaviour of little crustaceans so they're more likely to be eaten by a bird - this parasite's next host and the list is so damn long that I don't think I'll have time to go into.
As for whether humans can be affected...there's a little unicellular parasite call Toxoplasma gondii that infect cats and rats. When it gets into a rat, it goes into the brain and cause it to be less cautious and show less inhibition about hang out in area that has been doused with cat urine. This little parasite sometimes end accidentally end up in humans...there was some in New Scientist the year before about people who have latent Toxoplasma infection having personality changes and being more likely to get into car accidents, but I don't have time to go into that right now....
As a personal plug, I'm actually doing my PhD on a parasite that accumulates in the foot of a cockle, inhibiting its ability to burrow into the sediment, causing it remain on the surface of the mudflat where it can easily be picked off by birds like oystercatchers, which are the parasite's next host.
Yep, parasites are always behind the scenes...everywhere! Not to get you paranoid or anything... [/i]