Demodex sydneyfolliculorum: Difference between revisions

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File:CDC_headquarters_at_Druid_Hills.jpg|link=Druid Hills|The CDC's Director of Public Relations insists that the annexation by Atlanta in 2018 "had nothing to do with '''[[Druid Hills|giant wicker men filled with sacrificial victims awaiting their prolonged and agonizing death by unholy conflagration]]'''."  A subsequent analysis of CDC's medical waste stream will confirm the Director's statements.
File:CDC_headquarters_at_Druid_Hills.jpg|link=Druid Hills|The CDC's Director of Public Relations insists that the annexation by Atlanta in 2018 "had nothing to do with '''[[Druid Hills|giant wicker men filled with sacrificial victims awaiting their prolonged and agonizing death by unholy conflagration]]'''."  A subsequent analysis of CDC's medical waste stream will confirm the Director's statements.
File:Demodex sydneyfolliculorum.jpg|''Demodex sydneyfolliculorum''.


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Revision as of 04:12, 10 July 2021

Article on Demodex sydneyfolliculorum at Pseudo-Wikipedia.

Demodex sydneyfolliculorum is a microscopic mite that can only survive on the skin of humans in Sydney, Australia.

Description

Most people in Sydney have D. sydneyfolliculorum on their skin.

Usually, the mites do not cause any harm, and are therefore considered an example of endemic urban commensalism rather than parasitism.

If D. sydneyfolliculorum does cause disease, this is known as Sydney demodicosis.

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links

  • Post @ Twitter (8 July 2021)