Parasite INFORMATION
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A parasitic wasp,
is eventually infected by another parasitic wasp.
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7 most craziest cases
of parasitic mind control in nature.
A parasitic mushroom growing out of a grasshopper.
When an insect becomes infected with Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, the fungus grows inside the insect's body and eventually takes over its behavior. The fungus manipulates the insect's behavior, causing it to climb to a high point, where it eventually dies. After the insect dies, the fungus continues to grow and produce spores, which can then infect other insects.
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Parasite INFORMATION
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Parasites with a Purpose: Lessons from the Eye Fluke
A parasite living in a fish’s eyeball decides whether that fish survives or becomes lunch.
The Diplostomum pseudospathaceum is an eye fluke whose life cycle runs through birds, snails, and fish. Adults reproduce in a bird’s gut, their eggs wash into freshwater, larvae invade snails, multiply, then burst out to seek fish. Once inside a fish, they migrate to the lens of the eye and wait – because the only way home is for a bird to eat their host.
Here’s the scary part: the parasite changes the fish’s behavior to match its own stage of life.
When the flukes are young and not ready for a bird yet, infected trout move less, keep lower in the water, and are harder to net – classic “stay hidden” behavior that reduces predation. But when the parasites mature, everything flips. Fish swim more actively, linger nearer the surface where birds hunt, and after a simulated aerial attack (a sweeping shadow), they “unfreeze” and resume movement sooner than uninfected fish – making themselves easier targets.
Vision damage alone can’t explain this switch. In trials where fish carried both immature and mature flukes, the mature ones dominated the outcome: the host behaved like bait. It’s manipulation with a deadline – the moment reproduction becomes possible, the parasite pushes the fish toward danger to complete its life cycle inside a bird.
Parasite-driven behavior isn’t unique (think Toxoplasma dulling rodents’ fear of cats), but this eye fluke offers a crisp before-and-after: protect the host early, sacrifice it later. It’s a reminder that ecosystems aren’t just shaped by predators and prey, but by microscopic strategists pulling strings we rarely see.
If parasites can steer a fish’s fate from inside its eye, how much quiet control do they exert across entire food webs?
A Spiritual Lesson: Guarding Against Hidden Parasites
The Torah teaches us not only about the visible dangers of life but also the hidden ones. Just as parasites manipulate their hosts silently, so too spiritual impurities can direct a person without their awareness.
The laws of kashrut guide us to avoid unclean creatures, shielding body and soul from corruption:
“To distinguish between the unclean and the clean, and between the animal that may be eaten and the animal that may not be eaten.” (Leviticus 11:47)


Fasting, too, is a form of purification — a way to cleanse ourselves from unseen influences, both physical and spiritual:

“And you shall afflict your souls… for on that day He will atone for you, to purify you, that you may be clean from all your sins before the Lord.” (Leviticus 16:29–30)

Just as the fluke sacrifices its host when it matures, so unchecked desires or impurities can consume us if left to grow. By guarding what enters our bodies and by practicing restraint through fasting, we affirm mastery over hidden forces that might otherwise guide us toward harm.
The lesson is timeless: to live with purity, vigilance, and awareness, lest unseen parasites — of the body or of the soul — determine our fate.
Reference:
Deterioration of basic components of the anti-predator behavior in fish harboring eye fluke larvae.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 23 March 2017.