It turns out that there are a lot of creatures that can come back from the dead, or nightmarish parasitism on other creatures, which is creepy. These evil creatures specialize in drilling into other people's bodies to eat ready-made ones, and even eating people's brains. These bacteria and parasites are zombies in the real world.
1. Fish whose tongue is replaced by zombies

A terrible parasite similar to an "alien creature" was found in the Mediterranean Sea, which would swallow the tongue of a seabream and replace it, then lurk in the mouth of the host for further propagation. It is reported that in some waters, almost half of the fish are infected with this parasite. The "Betty" parasite swims into the gills of the juvenile fish and gradually swallows the tip of the fish's tongue, thus replacing this position, and obtaining nutrients by sucking the blood of the fish, and then growing and reproducing.
2. Zombie Ladybug
A wasp lays eggs in the belly of a ladybird and uses it as a host and food until the larvae grow. So we can understand ladybugs for this wasp as the human body is for aliens. In some cases, the ladybug is not dead, but is only partially paralyzed. However, it is still used as an egg-laying nest by the cruel wasp, becoming a walking dead until it is eaten by the larvae.
3. Zombie spiders
Usually, spiders are natural enemies of other insects, such as the golden spider. But spiders also have predators. A wasp feeds on spiders and lays eggs inside spiders. After the eggs hatch, the wasp larvae will slowly eat the parasitic spider, and then "bee occupy the spider nest" and slowly grow into an adult wasp in the spider's home. One of the wasp larvae also develops a cocoon before reaching adulthood. The females of these two types of wasps attack spiders during the day, using their long ovipositors to pierce the spider's nest.
4. Zombie rats
Of all the zombies, the Gangdi Hookworm is the most terrifying because it can be transmitted to humans! This product can be copied continuously in cat, and when the mouse eats the cat (the mouse really loves to eat cat shit), the bug burrows into the mouse's brain and destroys it. Toxoplasma can make the mouse forget its dislike of the cat, and even be attracted to the cat, and then the cat will easily eat the mouse. Scientists have also found that the toxoplasma can also be transmitted to humans, affecting the human mind, such as making it easier to think of cats and mice. Stay away from the cat's poop!
5. Zombie ants
A fungus that lived 48 million years ago was able to change and control an ant's behavior by releasing chemicals, turning it into a puppet of its own until the ant eventually died. The fungus still lives on Earth and usually parasitizes wood ants. Before returning to the canopy nest, wood ants are usually infected with this parasitic fungus when they pass through the forest floor cover, and their behavior is controlled by the fungus from then on. The fungus is constantly growing inside the ant and releases chemicals that influence the ant's behavior, making it a "zombie ant." Some "zombie ants" have since left their colonies and wandered out alone, looking for fresh leaves. The fungus-controlled "zombie ants" no longer have their own behavior and life, and the final stages of their lives are also the most painful and terrifying. In the last few hours of life, the "zombie ant" will crawl to the bottom of the leaf where it is located, and bite the central vein of the leaf with its jaw, trapping itself on the leaf, while the parasitic fungus is also locked on the leaf. When the "zombie ant" dies, the parasitic fungus sprouts from its head, produces spores and "launches" onto the forest cover at night, infecting other ants.
6. Zombie hook shrimp
Hook shrimp are not actually real shrimps, just shrimp crustaceans, this poor shrimp is the target of worms (echinococcus). After a hook shrimp is infected by a group of echinococcus, the echinosprud manipulates the hook shrimp's behavior to increase the chances of transfer to the next host. The eggs of Echinococcus are discharged along with the excrement of the host, and are ingested by hook shrimp. Therefore, in the body of the hook shrimp, the echinococcus will penetrate its intestinal wall and enter the body cavity to form a cyst, causing (depending on the type of parasite) positive phototropism or switching to land, so that the hook shrimp swim towards the water surface. Infected hook shrimp can change their response to olfactory and mechanical stimuli and can bend themselves to extremes. When you see a fragment, you can also wrap it up. All of these changes increase the chances of being preyed upon by the parasite's new host.
7. Zombie cockroaches
The golden wasp enslaves the cockroach by pricking the precise position of the cockroach's brain and injecting a venom that controls the mind. This parasitic bee will turn the zombified cockroach into a private nursery. It lays an egg on the body of a completely relaxed host, and the larvae swallow the cockroach's organs and finally burrow out of the cockroach's body.
8. Zombie bees
After the bee is infected by a parasitic fly, the adult female parasitic fly lays the eggs in the bee's stomach, and the eggs become maggots in the bees, and after eating the bees' internal organs, the pupae takes shape. When bees collect pollen in the flower bush, they are extremely susceptible to attachment to parasitic fly eggs. These parasitic flies live on the body of the bee, and when the parasitic flies continue to grow, they will invade the bee's head and control the bee, and the bees will suddenly lose consciousness and will fly around, which is the so-called "zombie bee". The parasitic bees began to fly around at night until they died. The parasites that parasitize the bees will transform from pupaes into parasites within 3 to 4 weeks after the bees die and begin to reproduce wildly.
9. Zombie crickets
Crickets and grasshoppers infected with a nematodes will begin a life of doom and will eventually commit suicide. This parasitic nematode that grows in crickets eventually forms larvae into the water, and they can grow 3-4 times as long as crickets in cricket hosts. Once they mature, nematodes will directly turn crickets into "zombies" and willingly throw themselves into the water to drown. In this way, nematodes are able to multiply, sending and scattering more larvae.
10. Zombie Crab
The female crab slave worm looks for a gap in the shell, and then stabs a "hollow dagger" into the crab's body, and she herself "injects" herself into the crab's body along the "dagger" and sheds a layer of shell. After entering the crab's body, this slimy crab slave worm began to occupy the throne. She grows "root whiskers", which stretch out to various parts of the crab's body, wrap around the crab's eye handle, and penetrate into the crab's claws and feet. The female crab slave insect continues to suck the body fluids of the crab to grow until it finally bursts out of the crab's body. A crab occupied by creatures will abandon its own needs to serve its owner. Crab hosts no longer waste nutrients on themselves, but instead stagger forward in search of food for feeding their foster owners.
11. Zombie snails
Snails are parasitized by a double-disced fluke called Leucochloridium paradoxum, a parasite that can enter the snail's digestive system and grow into a long tube filled with hundreds of reproductively capable tail crickets. Next, long pipes invade the snail's antennae, creating a strange, swollen, throbbing appearance to attract the attention of the birds. When birds eat this snail, they become hosts for the second stage of parasite growth. After the eggs are excreted into plants through bird droppings, they parasitize other snails and continue to begin their cycle of life.
12. Zombie caterpillar
A parasitic wasp called Glyptapantele implants larvae into the caterpillar's body. However, in this case, the wasp larvae make the caterpillar their bodyguard. The larvae emerge from the caterpillar and stick to nearby plants, while the caterpillar stands guard for it on one side, attacking any object that tries to get close to them. Scientists who study this peculiar phenomenon have found that one or two larvae hide behind caterpillars. Wasp larvae may secrete some chemical to control the brain of the poor caterpillar, which is at best a walking dead, and the larvae have eaten only half of the caterpillar.
13. Carnivorous zombie birds
This bird is called the big, although it usually loves to eat nuts and plant seeds, but it also loves to eat smaller birds and bats, crush their brains, and then eat them beautifully.
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