It looks like we've made it through another year of parasites, filled with posts on new research that was published this year on all manners of parasitic and infectious organisms. Among many other things, this year we covered some parasitological going-ons in the insect world with Zombee parasitoids, a story of parasitoid wasp, aphids and their symbionts, a wasp that can manipulate the colour of berries, and a cricket-infecting horsehair worm which has abandoned sex.
We also wrote about parasites that are infecting our furry friends including reindeer roundworms, a fleaof desert rodents, echidna gut parasites, anteater parasites, and a caring, maternal bat tick.
There were a lot of parasite action under the sea too, with jellyfish parasites that provide a floating buffet for some fish, a thorny-head worm which infects krill as a way of getting itself into whales, a leech that lives on shrimps, a prickly worm that lives in the stomach of dolphins, and a story of death, sex and fish guts.
Those are just a few example of post from this year; browse through the archives for a lot more parasitological tales.
Also for the first time on this blog, Susan and I had decided to report from conferences that we had attended on our respective continents! I wrote up a series of blog posts from the Australian Society for Parasitology annual conference, and Susan also wrote a few posts reporting from the American Society of Parasitology annual meeting.
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