Intermediate host
organism that harbors the sexually immature parasite and is required by it to undergo development and complete its life cycle From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Intermediate Host
When looking at the relationships amongst different biological members of our biosphere, we can notice a myriad of connections, dependences, interlinks, and alliances. Some are mutual while others are parasitic. Additionally, we can also notice some other relationships like commensalism, amensalism, and competition. The common subject among many of these is a “host”, for which the medical definition is:
“a harbouring organism that provides all the hospitality services to a guest organism”
To be specific, we can witness the presence of hosts in three relationships, namely mutualistic, commensalistic, and parasitic. The host plays a vital role in these relationships as it provides the 3Ns:- nutrition (food plus minerals), niche (shelter plus habitat), and nest egg (fund reserve for future)- for the optimal functioning of guest organism/s.
Now, if we try to categorize hosts into five broad groups, the concept clarity would greatly improve. So, before we define intermediate hosts, let’s look at the illustration below to understand how hosts are categorized.
So, in order to understand that among all these categories, what is an intermediate host, we should know what’s the basic difference between a definitive (primary) and intermediate (secondary) host. We should lay emphasis on the fact that these two hosts’ terminologies hold the most relevance when we are talking primarily about “parasite-host relationships”!!
There are selective pressures on both hosts and parasites that are “reciprocal” in nature. In order to escape the parasitism and resources’ extraction plus exhaustion by parasites, the host develops some adaptations. Simultaneously, the parasite in order to keep its nourishment and shelter needs secure, also develops certain adaptations. These adaptations are “reciprocal/antagonistic” ones and this sort of never-ending evolution is called coevolution. None of the species gives up, rather they keep adapting, evolving, and proliferating simultaneously down the evolutionary timelines.
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Intermediate Host Examples
Some examples of intermediate hosts are shown in Table 2.
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