Biology, asked by Adityarawat328, 1 year ago

How does malarial parasite reproduce?

Answers

Answered by rohan25novfeb
0
The malaria parasite life cycle involves two hosts. During a blood meal, a malaria-infected female Anopheles mosquito inoculates sporozoites into the human host . Sporozoites infect liver cells and mature into schizonts , which rupture and release merozoites . ... Merozoites infect red blood cells .

Adityarawat328: Bhai yaar ye to vahi vaat ho gayi...sara copy paste karke post kar diya answer Google she
rohan25novfeb: ya but u want answe na
Adityarawat328: but that's not the correct answer na
rohan25novfeb: it true
Adityarawat328: Yup
Answered by nitish19
1
The malaria parasite life cycle involves two hosts. During a blood meal, a malaria-infected female Anophelesmosquito inoculates sporozoites into the human host.
Sporozoites infect liver cells and mature into schizonts , which rupture and release merozoites . (Of note, in P. vivax and P. ovale a dormant stage [hypnozoites] can persist in the liver and cause relapses by invading the bloodstream weeks, or even years later.) After this initial replication in the liver (exo-erythrocytic schizogony ), the parasites undergo asexual multiplication in the erythrocytes (erythrocytic schizogony ). Merozoites infect red blood cells . The ring stage trophozoites mature into schizonts, which rupture releasing merozoites . Some parasites differentiate into sexual erythrocytic stages (gametocytes) . Blood stage parasites are responsible for the clinical manifestations of the disease.


hope it helps you

Adityarawat328: Pls bro don't copy paste from Google
Adityarawat328: And its wrong too
nitish19: okay... sorry for that...
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