Tag Archives: heads

These Slugs Cut Off Their Own Heads When They Want a New Body

The head (left) and body (right) of a regenerative, photosynthetic sea slug.
Image: Sayaka Mitoh

Looking like opened pea pods with a lustrous sheen, the sea slugs Elysia cf. marginata and Elysia atroviridis aren’t your average gastropods. First off, they’re members of sacoglossa, a clade of slugs known for taking the algae from marine plants and integrating the chloroplasts from that algae into their own cells, allowing them to get energy from sunlight. These two slug species are also capable of extreme regeneration; they can sever their heads and grow entirely new bodies.

New research published today in Current Biology describes this incredible feat of autotomy, or self-amputation. (It’s worth mentioning that the bodies do not generate new heads.) The discovery was made in Yoichi Yusa’s lab at Nara Women’s University in Japan, which cultures sea slugs from eggs to adulthood across generations to better understand these slimy creatures.

Sayaka Mitoh, a biologist at the university and lead author of the recent paper, stumbled upon the slugs’ well-intentioned self-dismemberment when she came across an individual in the lab whose head was no longer connected to its frilled, pickle-colored body. But its head was still moving.

“We had not thought they would perform such an unusual autotomy,” Mitoh said in an email. “This finding was completely a serendipity.”

Once the team found one self-severed individual, they went about investigating why, and precisely how, that breakage occurred. These observations included attempts to induce a self-beheading, by imitating the sort of cursory nips a marine predator would make on the slug in the wild (perhaps, they guessed, the slug parting with its body was similar to a fighter jet pilot using an ejector seat).

The researchers tied a nylon cord around where the slug’s head met its body, where it seemed the slug was predisposed to make the corporeal-cranial split. They did this lightly enough, more akin to a too-tight necktie than an asphyxiating agent—but the slugs don’t have respiratory systems as vertebrates do, so no biggie either way.

Though the true nature of the autotomy remains unknown, the team was able to induce autonomy in all but one slug within a day. In the paper, Mitoh’s team suggested that autotomy in the wild could happen in Elysia atroviridis because the slug is regularly encumbered with planktonic parasites—perhaps leaving a parasite-ridden body behind to grow a new one is the easiest way of dealing with the infestation. The researchers found that the slugs could go days without their hearts (located in the body, just below the breakage plane), and, over the course of a couple weeks, the new bodies were nearly at full size. In the paper, the team posited that the slugs could get by without their bodies by surviving purely on their photosynthetic capabilities.

“While living for a few days without a heart might sound impossible from our human perspective, these animals actually breathe through their skin and completely lack gills,” said Elise Laetz, a expert in photosynthesizing sea slugs at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands who isn’t affiliated with the new study. “It doesn’t surprise me that they can withstand a week without a heart to pump oxygenated hemolymph (like blood for invertebrates) around their bodies while they regenerate a new one.”

Laetz said in an email that the photosynthesis-as-rations idea seemed less likely, as a lot of the mechanisms for kleptoplasty (that unique ability of taking algal chloroplasts and using them to harness solar energy) are located in the body, not the head.

“Chloroplasts are stored in the slug’s digestive gland, which is highly branched and mainly located in the body of most sacoglossan species. When the slug autotomizes its body, it throws away most of its chloroplasts and therefore most of the energy it could get from those chloroplasts,” Laetz said. “I think it more likely that the slug fuels regeneration by feeding directly after it autotomizes its body, as the authors observed.”

Much more research needs to be done to better understand how these wriggly little slugs eke out existence without the help (or hindrance) of the majority of their corporeal form. The new observations suggest there are a lot more questions to ask of these animals.

“We want to study whether other species of sacoglossans have this ability, to study the evolutionary pattern and process of such extreme autotomy and regeneration,” Mitoh said. “The function of the autotomy is also worth studying. Moreover, we will further explore the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon at the tissue and cellular levels.”

They may not have the charisma of a corgi” giraffe or the zany DNA of a platypus, but the photosynthesizing, self-beheading sea slugs within sacoglossa deserve every bit the same amount of attention. The headless bodies will continue to be probed, and the bodiless heads even more so.

“Observations like those presented in this paper highlight the need for fundamental scientific research on all branches of the tree of life,” Laetz said. “You never know when an animal as innocuous as a sea slug has an ability that could lead to advancements in applied research.”

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Snakes insert their heads into living frogs’ bodies to swallow their organs (because nature is horrifying)

For knife-toothed kukri snakes, the tastiest parts of a frog are its organs, preferably sliced out of the body cavity and eaten while the frog is still alive. After observing this grisly habit for the first time in Thailand, scientists have spotted two more kukri snake species that feast on the organs of living frogs and toads.

The new (and gory) observations suggested that this behavior is more widespread in this snake group than expected. Two snakes also eventually swallowed their prey whole, raising new questions about why they would extract the living animals’ organs first.

The scientists documented a Taiwanese kukri snake (Oligodon formosanus) and an ocellated kukri snake (Oligodon ocellatus) pursuing amphibian organ meals, tearing open frogs’ and toads’ abdomens and burying their heads inside, according to the studies. O. formosanus would even perform “death rolls” while clutching its prey, perhaps to shake the organs loose. As the snakes swallowed the organs one by one, the amphibians were still alive. Sometimes, the process would take hours, the researchers reported.

Related: Beastly feasts: Amazing photos of animals and their prey

There are 83 species of kukri snakes in the Oligodon genus in Asia. The snakes typically measure no more than 3 feet (100 centimeters) long, and the group’s name comes from the kukri, a curved machete from Nepal, as its shape is reminiscent of the snakes’ large, highly modified rear teeth. Kukri snakes use these teeth for slicing into eggs, but they can also be formidable slashing weapons (as some very unfortunate frogs have discovered).

In one study, published Feb. 15 in the journal Herpetozoa, scientists described three snake attacks on rotund banded bullfrogs (Kaloula pulchra), which are so round that they are also known as bubble frogs or chubby frogs. They have brown backs with lighter stripes down their sides and cream-colored stomachs, and they measure up to 3 inches (8 cm) long, according to Thai National Parks

Two of the attacks were by Taiwanese kukri snakes, and took place in Hong Kong in October 2020. One snake, filmed on Oct. 2 in a residential neighborhood garden, emerged from a hole in the ground to bite a passing bubble frog, slicing open the frog and stuffing its head inside. Snake and frog tussled for about 40 minutes; the snake performed about 15 body rotations, or “death rolls,” during the battle, according to the study. 

“We believe that the purpose of these death rolls was to tear out organs to be subsequently swallowed,” Henrik Bringsøe, lead author of both studies and an amateur herpetologist and naturalist, said in a statement.

A Taiwanese kukri snake cut open the abdomen of a painted burrowing frog and extracted several organs, which it is biting and chewing. The observation took place in Hong Kong. (Image credit: Vince Natteri)

A second Taiwanese kukri snake was discovered on Oct. 8 in an urban park while “energetically” dining on a frog’s organs that were “exposed and visible,” the study authors wrote.

The third attack on a bubble frog was by a small-banded kukri snake — the species that was first documented exhibiting this behavior — on Sept. 15, at a factory site outside a small village in northeastern Thailand. During the struggle, the snake performed 11 death rolls, its teeth buried firmly in the frog’s belly.

“The snake’s efforts resulted in its teeth penetrating the abdomen to such an extent that blood and possibly some organ tissue appeared,” the scientists reported. “Eventually, the frog was swallowed whole while still alive.”

Another study, published on the same day in Herpetozoa, presented an observation of an ocellated kukri snake feasting on an Asian common toad (Duttaphrynus melanostictus) inside a lodge in a national park in southern Vietnam. These toads are stout, thick-skinned and variably colored, and they measure about 3 inches (8.5 cm) long, according to Animal Diversity Web, a biodiversity database maintained by the University of Michigan’s Museum of Zoology. 

Observers recorded this attack on May 31, 2020. The toad was already dead at the time, “and the snake was moving its head and neck side to side as if trying to work its way inside,” the study authors wrote. Minutes later, the snake gulped down the toad whole.

An ocellated kukri snake from Vietnam first pierced this poisonous Asian common toad, buried its head deeply into the abdomen of the amphibian, and then proceeded to swallow the toad whole. (Image credit: James Holden)

In the 2020 study about small-banded kukri snakes eviscerating Asian common toads, the scientists hypothesized that the snakes selectively ate the organs to avoid the toads’ deadly toxins. However, the ocellated kukri snake swallowed the toad after its organ appetizer, hinting that the snakes might have some natural resistance to the toads’ poison. 

Chubby frogs also have a built-in deterrent that may encourage predators to go straight for their organs. While the frogs aren’t toxic, they defensively secrete a sticky mucous that has an unpleasant taste, according to the University of California, Berkeley’s AmphibiaWeb.

“We hope that future observations may uncover additional aspects of the fascinating feeding habits of kukri snakes — though we may indeed call them gruesome!” Bringsøe said in the statement.

Originally published on Live Science.

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Lindsey Graham heads to Mar-a-Lago on a peace mission as Trump’s latest intra-party feud rages

According to a person familiar with his plans, Graham plans to spend his time on the golf course with Trump — ideally convincing the former president that regaining congressional majorities for Republicans will help bolster his own presidential legacy. This person said Graham wants to be “constructive,” urging Trump to use his influence for the party’s good.

Graham is the latest Republican to visit Trump at Mar-a-Lago. Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the No. 2 House Republican, met privately with Trump there on Tuesday, the day before Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell vowed never to do so.

A staunch ally of Trump’s, Graham has said in recent weeks he is concerned with how the feud between Trump and McConnell will affect Republicans’ chances in next year’s midterm elections.

“They’re now at each other’s throat,” Graham said on Fox News this week. “I’m more worried about 2022 than I’ve ever been. I don’t want to eat our own.”

Like McConnell, Graham has the next election at the top of his agenda. But while McConnell has made a conscious decision to ignore Trump and wants the party to move beyond the twice-impeached former president, Graham is trying to engage Trump to help the party’s chances.

“President Trump is the most consequential Republican in the party,” Graham said on Fox. “If Mitch McConnell doesn’t understand that, he’s missing a lot.”

Not every Republican agrees with Graham. Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchison, a former congressman, told CNN’s Erin Burnett Thursday that Graham is wrong to suggest Trump is essential to the party’s future success.

“Certainly he has a huge following in our party, but he cannot define us for the future,” Hutchison said. “We have to give outreach to the Trump supporters. They’re a huge part of our Republican base, and we have to identify with the issues they are concerned about. But it doesn’t have to be defined by one person.”

Nevertheless, Trump remains the GOP figure whose words and actions reliably command the most attention. And in his lengthy Tuesday statement blasting McConnell, Trump included a veiled threat to support his own candidates in Republican primaries.

“Where necessary and appropriate, I will back primary rivals who espouse Making America Great Again, and our policy of America First,” Trump said.

That possibility concerns many Republicans, especially those who fear the coming GOP primary season could rob them of any chance of winning back the Senate. The worry is that more extreme candidates, boosted by Trump, will win the primaries, but then prove unable to win in the general election against Democrats. This is of particular concern in swing states.

One troublesome example for these Republicans is Arizona Republican party chair Kelli Ward, a Trump favorite. But if she ran for Senate with a Trump endorsement, few think she could go on to beat Democrat Mark Kelly, who is finishing out the late John McCain’s term. To keep his seat, Kelly will have to run in 2022 for a full six-year term of his own.

And there is downright panic among national party leaders that, in Georgia, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene will run against former Republican Sen. David Perdue for the Senate seat. The nomination of Greene, who has publicly espoused conspiracy theories in the past, could diminish the Republican Party’s chances of beating Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock.

GOP sources say convincing Trump either to stay on the sidelines in those two races, or even endorse a candidate like Perdue, would go a long way.

Then there is the question of whether Trump’s influence in the GOP is deterring strong candidates from jumping in at all.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey’s term is up after 2022, for example, and many in the party think he has the best shot at beating Kelly for the Senate seat. But Trump turned on Ducey after the governor refused to go along with his lies about the election and certified Joe Biden’s win in Arizona.

Ducey told CNN last month he isn’t running for Senate, but some believe he might change his mind if Trump promises to stay quiet.

And in New Hampshire, Republicans are hoping to lure former Sen. Kelly Ayotte back for another campaign. But she is another person who has clashed with Trump.

Graham may be one of the few people who can persuade Trump. The South Carolina Republican just won reelection to another six-year term in the Senate, and has built up credibility with the former president, who enjoys their friendly competition on the golf course. But Graham — like most who encounter the mercurial former president — has had mixed success in getting through to him.

Throughout Trump’s presidency, Graham pressed him to reconsider his push to remove all US troops from Afghanistan, both privately and in television appearances. Trump continued to move forward on plans to withdraw forces from there through the end of his presidency.
But Graham has also been selective in how he tried to influence Trump. Rather than trying to change his mind about withdrawing US troops from Syria in 2019, Graham instead used the opportunity to praise Trump for “pushing us to think about a strategy post-caliphate.”

Once a tough critic of Trump during the 2016 primaries, Graham has found his way into the inner circle — a development that has astounded even him.

“I have never been called this much by a president in my life,” Graham told the New York Times’s Mark Leibovich in 2019. “It’s weird, and it’s flattering, and it creates some opportunity. It also creates some pressure.”

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story misstated the day Scalise met with Trump. They met on Tuesday, not Wednesday.

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Christina Aguilera cuts a cool look in black trucker hat as she heads to recording studio in Miami

Christina Aguilera cuts a cool look in black trucker hat and red sunglasses as she heads to recording studio in Miami

Christina Aguilera recently enjoyed a romantic weekend with fiancé Matthew Rutler.

And the five-time Grammy winner is back to work on some new music, after celebrating Valentine’s Day.

She cut a cool look Monday in a black trucker hat and a pair of red sunglasses, as she headed to a recording studio in Miami, where she’s enjoying a vacation with her family.

Back to work: Christina Aguilera cut a cool look Monday in a black trucker hat and a pair of red sunglasses, as she headed to a recording studio in Miami, where she’s enjoying a vacation with her family

The 40-year-old kept it casual in a black long-sleeve top with some black Chrome Hearts sweatpants and a pair of red Nike Air Jordans.

She finished the look with some sparkling diamond bling around her neck and a matching watch.

Rutler, 35, also stepped out barefoot in a white t-shirt and grey gym shorts, as he cleaned up balloons and flowers from the dock of their rental home.  

Aguilera previously took to Instagram with a photo of their intimate outdoor celebration, under a wall of Christmas lights.

Black and red: The 40-year-old kept it casual in a black long-sleeve top with some black Chrome Hearts sweatpants and a pair of red Nike Air Jordans

The day after: Rutler, 35, also stepped out barefoot in a white t-shirt and grey gym shorts, as he cleaned up balloons and flowers from the dock of their rental home

Romantic evening: Aguilera previously took to Instagram with a photo of their intimate outdoor celebration

Self love: The Genie In a Bottle artist also posted a sexy photo of herself in a black pantsuit, writing: ‘And Happy Valentine’s Day to me because self love is important too!’

She captioned the photo: ‘Happy Valentine’s Day my love…here’s to all the adventures we’ve shared and many more to come.’

The Genie In a Bottle artist also posted a sexy photo of herself in a black pantsuit, writing: ‘And Happy Valentine’s Day to me because self love is important too!’

Rutler wrote on Instagram: ‘@xtina What a ride it’s been! And we’re just getting started. You still make me crush. Every. Single. Day. Happy Valentine’s Day my love.’ 

Aguilera and Rutler got engaged on Valentine’s Day in 2014, after they met on the set of her 2010 movie musical Burlesque, on which he worked as a production assistant.

They share daughter Summer Rain, six, and she co-parents son Max Liron, 13, with ex-husband Jordan Bratman, 43, to whom she was married from 2005 to 2011. 

Happy family: Aguilera and Rutler got engaged on Valentine’s Day in 2014, after they met on the set of her 2010 movie musical Burlesque (pictured in October, 2019)



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Historic storm heads to Texas days after icy roads cause massive deadly pileup

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott urged residents to stay off the roads and conserve power as a winter storm barrels through the state. 

“Every part of the state will face freezing conditions over the coming days, and I urge all Texans to remain vigilant against the extremely harsh weather that is coming,” Governor Abbott said Saturday.

“Stay off the roads, take conscious steps to conserve energy, and avoid dangerous practices like bringing generators indoors or heating homes with ovens or stovetops.”

FORT WORTH DEADLY ACCIDENT: SOME VICTIMS IDENTIFIED AFTER 130-CAR PILEUP DUE TO ICY CONDITIONS

Texas authorities are on high alert following a 133-car pileup that left at least six people dead and dozens more injured in Fort Worth Thursday. 

Icy conditions also led to a 13-car crash in Magnolia, Texas Friday. 

Abbott issued an emergency disaster declaration for the entire state and will request a Federal Emergency Declaration from the White House. 

TEXAS TO GET HEAVY SNOW AS US TEMPERATURES CONTINUE PLUNGING

“Our emergency response to this winter weather requires a collective approach between state agencies, local officials, and Texans throughout our communities to ensure the safety and security of the Lone Star State,” Abbott said Saturday. 

The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm warning for nearly every county in the state, saying that travel in north and central Texas “could be very difficult…if not impossible late Sunday into Monday.”

“Snow totals of several inches are forecast across much of Oklahoma and into northern Texas,” the Weather Prediction Center wrote Saturday. Snow will start falling throughout Texas late Saturday night. 

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Temperatures will drop precipitously over the next 72 hours. 

The National Weather Service in Amarillo warned that “dangerously cold wind chills under -20 are expected in the Panhandles each of the next 3 mornings with Monday morning featuring values as low as -30.”

Abbott said “roads will be very dangerous” and much of Texas “will face historic low temperature that will last for days.”



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