Difference Between Microbes and Parasites

Question:
This is a question about microbes.
Specifically e-coli – which is listed as escherichia coli infections in the book.
What is the difference between a parasite and a microbe?
We are wondering where to find the frequencies for microbes.

Answer:
Basically a Parasite is a huge organism, huge in terms of microbiology that is:  Parasites either look like a garden worm or a tick under a microscope.  Its purpose is to feed off its host, animal or human, and can invade the blood, organs or digestive systems of its host.
Microbes are single-cell organisms so tiny that millions can fit into the eye of a needle. They are the oldest form of life on earth. Microbe fossils date back more than 3.5 billion years to a time when the Earth was covered with oceans that regularly reached the boiling point, hundreds of millions of years before dinosaurs roamed the earth.  Without microbes, we couldn’t eat or breathe.  Without us, they’d probably be just fine. Understanding microbes is vital to understanding the past and the future of ourselves and our planet. Microbes are everywhere. There are more of them on a person’s hand than there are people on the entire planet! Microbes are in the air we breathe, the ground we walk on, the food we eat—they’re even inside us!  We couldn’t digest food without them—animals couldn’t, either. Without microbes, plants couldn’t grow, garbage wouldn’t decay and there would be a lot less oxygen to breathe.
Perhaps the client was referring to something more specific, like bacteria?  Microbes are a very general topic
If the client is focusing on the “Bacterial microbes” then go no further than the “Bacterial Infections and Mycoses frequency set”
Bacterial Infections and Mycoses: 0.05, 0.37, 0.83, 2.50, 3.00, 73.30, 95.75, 175.00, 269.71, 355.08

 

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