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Sea Slugs Can Cut off Their Heads and Grow a New Body

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by rocketsjudoka, Mar 10, 2021.

  1. rocketsjudoka

    rocketsjudoka Member

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    Was going to post this in the "learned over Quarantine" thread but think it deserves it's own.
    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smar...-head-crawls-around-regrowing-body-180977205/
    [​IMG]
    Sea Slug’s Decapitated Head Crawls Around Before Regrowing a Body
    Researchers think that lopping off its own noggin could help the critter rid itself of parasites

    SMARTNEWS Keeping you current
    Sea Slug’s Decapitated Head Crawls Around Before Regrowing a Body
    Researchers think that lopping off its own noggin could help the critter rid itself of parasites
    By Alex Fox
    SMITHSONIANMAG.COM
    2 HOURS AGO

    New York Times.
    Like this article? SIGN UP f
    or ou

    The findings, published this week in the journal Current Biology, describe Elysia marginata and Elysia atroviridis sea slug heads detaching and crawling away from their bodies. Within hours, the researchers say these disembodied heads started munching on algae again as though nothing had happened. Per the Times, the researchers think the sea slugs’ grisly strategy may be a way of ridding themselves of parasites.

    Susan Milius of Science News notes that there are other examples of similarly extreme regeneration in the animal kingdom, including flatworms and sea squirts. But these creatures, according to Science News, have simpler bodies. The sea slugs are regrowing vital organs such as the heart, while flatworms and sea squirts don’t have hearts to begin with.

    Oddly enough, the headless bodies can also survive for a few months, their hearts still beating as they begin to rot, reports Christa Leste-Lasserre for New Scientist. But, as Sayaka Mitoh, a biologist at Nara Women’s University in Japan and co-author of the paper, tells New Scientist, the decapitated bodies never sprout heads. “The head has the brain and teeth, or radula, which may be irreplaceable,” she says.

    In experiments, not all the sea slugs lopped off their own heads, and of those that did, about a third of them successfully regrew their bodies. Researchers also observed that the self-amputating sea slugs tended to be harboring crustacean parasites called copepods. According to New Scientist, regrowing a body from the neck down is a young slug’s game, as the older slugs in the experiment didn’t survive the separation.

    “This may seem like a silly choice,” Mitoh tells New Scientist. “But the old ones would die soon anyway, and they might stand a chance of surviving and regenerating a parasite-free body.”

    Per Science News, the slugs’ leaf shaped bodies and green coloration may explain how their severed heads can survive on their own. Slugs in the genus Elysia steal the green-pigmented engines of photosynthesis from the algae they eat, earning themselves the nickname of “solar-powered sea slugs,” per the Times.

    The slugs can keep these hijacked bits of cellular machinery, called chloroplasts, alive for weeks or months, according to Science News. The sugars that the chloroplasts manufacture out of sunlight provide the slugs with a low cost source of sustenance. Crucially for the severed slug heads, Mitoh tells New Scientist, the creature’s digestive glands are thought to be “distributed all over the body surface, including the head.”

    Per
    Science News, the slugs’ leaf shaped bodies and green coloration may explain how their severed heads can survive on their own. Slugs in the genus Elysia steal the green-pigmented engines of photosynthesis from the algae they eat, earning themselves the nickname of “solar-powered sea slugs,” per the Times.

    The slugs can keep these hijacked bits of cellular machinery, called chloroplasts, alive for weeks or months, according to Science News. The sugars that the chloroplasts manufacture out of sunlight provide the slugs with a low cost source of sustenance. Crucially for the severed slug heads, Mitoh tells New Scientist, the creature’s digestive glands are thought to be “distributed all over the body surface, including the head.”

     
  2. jiggyfly

    jiggyfly Member

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    How are they cutting off their heads?
     
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  3. GRENDEL

    GRENDEL Member

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    [​IMG]
     
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  4. donkeypunch

    donkeypunch Member

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    Is this the new Humanity is Doomed part 9 thread?
     
  5. The Captain

    The Captain ...and I'm all out of bubblegum

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    Someone convince Trump this works for people, stat!
     
  6. heypartner

    heypartner Member

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    I was just going to ask if the new body helped them look younger.

    but alas ...
     
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  7. TimDuncanDonaut

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    The slug is just trying to get ahead in life
     
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  8. jiggyfly

    jiggyfly Member

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    [​IMG]
     
  9. rocketsjudoka

    rocketsjudoka Member

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    That part isn't clear and I haven't seen it stating how they are doing it. My guess is that they can cause the cells to die around their "neck" and then their head detaches.
     
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  10. rocketsjudoka

    rocketsjudoka Member

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    You should've quit while you were a head...
     
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  11. SuraGotMadHops

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    I, for one, welcome our new gastropod mollusc overlords.
     
  12. jiggyfly

    jiggyfly Member

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    [​IMG]
     
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  13. rocketsjudoka

    rocketsjudoka Member

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    Are these puns too sluggish for you?
     
  14. Jontro

    Jontro Member

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    thanks for the heads up, this slug is ahead of its time.
     
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  15. jiggyfly

    jiggyfly Member

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    I will allow.

    [​IMG]
     
  16. BamBam

    BamBam Member

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    [​IMG]
    :eek:

    .......
    .......
    .......
     
  17. droxford

    droxford Member

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    No
    body
    knows
     
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  18. jiggyfly

    jiggyfly Member

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    [​IMG]
     

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