Wildlife Vampires - Part 3
This is the third post in our series about real life wildlife vampires. Click here for part one and part two.
Oxpeckers and Vampire Finches
There are several bird species that form symbiotic
relationships with larger animals. The
larger animals tolerate the birds’ presence on their bodies, leaving the birds
free to feast upon ticks and other parasites that are lodged in the skin
feeding upon the animals’ blood. It’s a
win-win situation. But oxpeckers are birds that take it one step further. Not only do they feed upon parasitic invertebrates, they are happy to consume bits of flesh and blood of their host
animals while they’re at it.
Vampire finches inhabit the Galapagos Islands and supplement their diet of seeds, insects and nectar with the blood of other birds, usually the blue-footed booby. They peck a hole in the flesh of the booby to get the larger bird’s blood and strangely, the boobies hardly seem to notice.
Few animals evoke the “icky-creepies” in people as much as worms do with their slimy squirminess and their faceless, legless bodies. When such a creature also feeds upon human blood, it only adds to the horror factor. Such is the case with leeches. These parasitic worms attach themselves to their host and bloat themselves on blood. While most leeches are external parasites, some species will swim into nasal cavities and stay there, feeding and growing. Capable of holding undigested blood in their stomachs, parasitic leeches can go months between feedings.
VIDEO: Watch some leeches in action!
Oxpecker Photo:http://www.flickr.com/photos/arnolouise/ / CC BY-NC 2.0














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