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    • Home >
    • Articles >
    • Pet Health >
    • Pests and Parasites >
    • Tapeworms

    Tapeworms

    • Created in Pet Health, Pests and Parasites

    tapeworms

    Tapeworms live in the digestive tracts of vertebrates as adults and often in the bodies of various animals as juveniles. In a tapeworm infection, adults absorb food predigested by the host, so the worms have no need for a digestive tract or a mouth. Large tapeworms are made almost entirely of reproductive structures with a small "head" for attachment. Symptoms vary widely, depending on the species causing the infection. The largest tapeworms can be 20 m or longer. Tapeworm awareness is importance to humans because they infect people and livestock. Two important tapeworms are the pork tapeworm and the beef tapeworm

    • Pet Health
      • Chronic Conditions
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      • Pests and Parasites
      • Orthopedics
    • Today's Veterinarian
    • Choosing Your Pet
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      • Cats
      • Dogs
      • Exotics
        • Amphibians
        • Birds
        • Reptiles
          • Lizards
          • Turtles
      • Small Mammals
        • Ferrets
        • Rabbits
        • Domesticated Animals
          • Prairie Dogs
        • Pocket Pets
          • Chinchillas
          • Guinea Pigs
          • Hamsters
          • Hedgehogs
          • Rats
      • Livestock
        • Cows
        • Donkeys, Horses & Mules
        • Goats
        • Pigs
        • Poultry
        • Sheep
    • Living With Your Pet
      • Bringing Your Pet Home
      • Children and Pets
      • Providing Care
      • Travel
      • Saying Goodbye
    • Newsletter Library
      • Cats
      • Tips for Pet Owners
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      • Recognizing Illness
      • Nutrition & Food
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      • Seasonal Topics
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      • Equine
      • Newsletter Archive
        • Fun with Pets
        • Unbelievable Pets
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