Horsehair worms can control a host's brain and steer it to water, where it drowns.
These parasitic worms, which resemble dark and stringy horse hair, take control of their host's brain and drive it to suicide.
Hairworms' magic copy-cat trickHairworms need water to reproduce, so when they're ready they force their host to water, where ultimately the host drowns.
Horsehair worms make their hosts more active in the middle of the day , when it's easier to find light reflecting off water.
So the Chordodes worms can only control mantises and can't puppeteer other insects or mammals, according to the study.
Persons:
what's, —, they're, it's, hairworms, Tappei Mishina, Hairworms, Rather, Mishina
Organizations:
Service, University of California's, Pest Management