• CEbbinghaus
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      1068 months ago

      Trust me. You don’t want to know. It’s fucked up parasite shit. On the same level as the fungus that takes over ants.

        • @[email protected]
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          558 months ago

          That’ll be Ophiocordyceps unilateralis. It invades the ant’s brain and causes it to leave it’s nest and go somewhere better for the fungus then wait to die as the fungus errupts from its head.

          If we’re talking about nightmare mind control horrors, we shouldn’t forget our old friend toxiplasmosis gondii, which infects rodents, then alters their behaviour so they’re not afraid of cats, in particular. This leads to the rodent getting eaten so the parasite can infect the cat, which is the only place it can reproduce, before spreading from the cat faeces back into the rodent population. It can also infect humans where there is evidence that it affects behavior too, particularly making males more careless of rules.

          Sleep well.

          • @[email protected]
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            168 months ago

            That’s why momma always reminded us:

            Be kind, they may harbor a latent Toxoplasma gondii infection that could subtly influence their behavior and personality.

            • @[email protected]
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              68 months ago

              Oh come now, there are so many more interesting parasites that mess with your brain for their own benefit; Trypanosoma which messes with your sleep before slowly killing you, Naegleria fowleri that just straight up eats your brain and a host of others that do weird and wonderful things.

              Look at it this way; before you were surrounded by mind controlled ants, suicidal rodents and other such horrors without even knowing it. Now you do know about them. What’s that? I’m really not helping? Ok, I’ll stop.

              • CEbbinghaus
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                18 months ago

                And don’t forget the slow and almost certain agonising death of rabies for which we have no cure

                • @[email protected]
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                  28 months ago

                  Ah rabies, a delightful little horror that makes it so painful to swallow that victims will flinch at the mere sight of water, then drives them into a frenzied rage in an attempt to spread through bite wounds. It looks like they’ve developed a couple of protocols (Milwaukee and Recife Protocols) that give the victim a chance, even if mot a good one. They both involve an induced coma so that you don’t attack anyone, so that’s fun.

                  Get your vaccinations folks, running around foaming at the mouth and attacking anyone near you isn’t a good way to go out.

                  • CEbbinghaus
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                    18 months ago

                    I haven’t heard of the biting in humans being as prevelant as in animals. But they certainly get more aggressive and loose control

          • Queen HawlSera
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            28 months ago

            Wait they can effect humans now?!?! And they’re capable of understanding rules enough to get us to actively break them!?!?!?

            • @[email protected]
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              8 months ago

              I don’t think they understand ‘rules’, rather they mess with the brain structures that control self regulation. It’s believed that around 30-50% of the human population may have a T. gondii infection, with a corresponding link to other diseases. High levels may also go some way to explaining the prevalence of high risk behaviors in certain areas, although proving a correlation is challenging due to confounding factors.

        • @[email protected]
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          98 months ago

          It’s a thing that exists in real life that was essentially used as the base premise (but for humans) in The Last Of Us.

    • @[email protected]
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      788 months ago

      It’s a parasite that causes snails to get to higher places and get eaten by birds where it reproduces in their digestive system.

      • @elbucho
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        478 months ago

        God damn, Nature. You scary.

    • @anyhow2503
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      628 months ago

      The snail has been taken over by parasitic flatworms that control it to seek out exposed spots and pulsate inside of their eye stalks to get eaten by a bird and enter the next stage of their life cycle, which they spend by living in the birds cloaca and spreading their eggs via feces.