Hematophagy (sometimes spelled
haematophagy or
hematophagia) is the practice of certain
animals of
feeding on
blood (from the
Greek words αἷμα
haima "blood" and φάγειν
phagein "to eat"). Since blood is a fluid tissue rich in nutritious
proteins and
lipids that can be taken without enormous effort, hematophagy has
evolved as a preferred form of feeding in many small animals such as
worms and
arthropods. Some intestinal
nematodes, such as Ancylostomids, feed on blood extracted from the capillaries of the gut and about 75 percent of all species of
leeches (e.g.
Hirudo medicinalis), a free-living worm, are hematophagous. Some
fish, such as
lampreys and
candirus, and
mammals, especially the
vampire bats, and birds, such as the
vampire finches,
hood mockingbirds, and
oxpeckers, also practise hematophagy.