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When most people think of worms, they picture something harmless wriggling around in the garden. But not all worms are so innocent.
Some are downright terrifying, and a few might even make you sleep with the lights on. Here’s a list of the creepiest, most disturbing worms out there. You’ve been warned.
This one feels like it escaped a horror movie. The bobbit worm hides beneath the sand in warm oceans, waiting in silence. When a fish swims by, bam!, it strikes with lightning-fast jaws, sometimes slicing prey clean in half. Oh, and it can grow over 3 metres long. Sleep tight.
Velvet worms look kind of cute until you see them hunt. They shoot out sticky jets of slime from tubes on their heads to trap their prey, then slowly move in for the kill. Creepy, right? They’ve been around since before the dinosaurs, which somehow makes them even more unsettling.
This one is just plain weird. It infects snails and crawls into their eye stalks, making them pulse and twitch like psychedelic caterpillars. Birds mistake them for snacks and eat the snail, spreading the parasite. Yes, it basically turns the snail into a zombie puppet.
This is nightmare fuel. The guinea worm starts small, but grows inside your body for about a year before painfully crawling out through your skin. People have described the sensation as burning hot, like a thread of fire trying to escape. It used to be common, but thanks to global efforts, it’s almost gone now.
You know what’s worse than something crawling under your skin? Something crawling across your eyeball. The Loa Loa worm lives under the skin and occasionally moves to the surface of the eye, visible, alive, and very much squirming. It’s rare, but real.
While not dangerous, these earthworms from Australia can grow up to 9 feet long. Imagine digging in your backyard and uncovering a worm as long as a kayak. They even make gurgling noises underground. Creepy? Definitely.
This worm lives in your gut, often without any obvious symptoms. But if you’ve got a bad case, you might see one in your stool, or even feel it moving during an ultrasound. They’re surprisingly common and can grow over a foot long inside you. Gross.
Small but brutal. These worms latch onto your intestines and feed on your blood. Over time, they can cause serious anemia and fatigue. They usually enter through your feet when walking barefoot in infected soil. Sneaky little monsters.
These live in your large intestine and can cause everything from bloody diarrhea to severe malnutrition. Kids are most at risk in places with poor sanitation, and heavy infections can seriously stunt growth and development. They may be as thin as threads, but they do a lot of damage.
If you like sushi or raw fish, listen up. This parasite hides in seafood and can burrow into your stomach wall, causing sharp pain and nausea. In some cases, people have had allergic reactions too. Cooking fish properly kills it, but raw lovers beware.
This one’s a rising threat in tropical regions. People can get infected by eating raw or undercooked snails or other critters that carry the parasite. Once inside, it can affect your brain and spinal cord, leading to meningitis-like symptoms. Not exactly what you expect from a salad.