Why don’t poisonous animals poison themselves? - Rebecca D. Tarvin

2,562,679 views ・ 2018-07-05

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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One fine day,
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when Charles Darwin was still a student at Cambridge,
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the budding naturalist tore some old bark off a tree
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and found two rare beetles underneath.
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He’d just taken one beetle in each hand when he spotted a third beetle.
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Stashing one of the insects in his mouth for safekeeping,
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he reached for the new specimen –
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when a sudden spray of hot, bitter fluid scalded his tongue.
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Darwin’s assailant was the bombardier beetle.
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It’s one of thousands of animal species,
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like frogs,
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jellyfish,
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salamanders,
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and snakes,
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that use toxic chemicals to defend themselves –
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in this case, by spewing poisonous liquid from glands in its abdomen.
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But why doesn’t this caustic substance, ejected at 100 degrees Celsius,
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hurt the beetle itself?
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In fact, how do any toxic animals survive their own secretions?
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The answer is that they use one of two basic strategies:
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securely storing these compounds
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or evolving resistance to them.
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Bombardier beetles use the first approach.
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They store ingredients for their poison in two separate chambers.
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When they’re threatened, the valve between the chambers opens
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and the substances combine in a violent chemical reaction
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that sends a corrosive spray shooting out of the glands,
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passing through a hardened chamber that protects the beetle’s internal tissues.
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Similarly, jellyfish package their venom safely
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in harpoon-like structures called nematocysts.
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And venomous snakes store their flesh-eating, blood-clotting compounds
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in specialized compartments that only have one exit:
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through the fangs and into their prey or predator.
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Snakes also employ the second strategy: built-in biochemical resistance.
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Rattlesnakes and other types of vipers manufacture special proteins
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that bind and inactivate venom components in the blood.
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Meanwhile, poison dart frogs have also evolved resistance to their own toxins,
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but through a different mechanism.
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These tiny animals defend themselves using hundreds of bitter-tasting compounds
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called alkaloids
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that they accumulate from consuming small arthropods like mites and ants.
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One of their most potent alkaloids is the chemical epibatidine,
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which binds to the same receptors in the brain as nicotine
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but is at least ten times stronger.
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An amount barely heavier than a grain of sugar would kill you.
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So what prevents poison frogs from poisoning themselves?
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Think of the molecular target of a neurotoxic alkaloid as a lock,
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and the alkaloid itself as the key.
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When the toxic key slides into the lock,
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it sets off a cascade of chemical and electrical signals
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that can cause paralysis,
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unconsciousness,
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and eventually death.
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But if you change the shape of the lock, the key can’t fit.
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For poison dart frogs and many other animals with neurotoxic defenses,
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a few genetic changes alter the structure of the alkaloid-binding site
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just enough to keep the neurotoxin from exerting its adverse effects.
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Poisonous and venomous animals
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aren’t the only ones that can develop this resistance:
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their predators and prey can, too.
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The garter snake, which dines on neurotoxic salamanders,
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has evolved resistance to salamander toxins
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through some of the same genetic changes as the salamanders themselves.
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That means that only the most toxic salamanders can avoid being eaten—
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and only the most resistant snakes will survive the meal.
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The result is that the genes providing the highest resistance and toxicity
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will be passed on in greatest quantities to the next generations.
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As toxicity ramps up, resistance does too,
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in an evolutionary arms race that plays out over millions of years.
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This pattern appears over and over again.
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Grasshopper mice resist painful venom from scorpion prey
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through genetic changes in their nervous systems.
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Horned lizards readily consume harvester ants,
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resisting their envenomed sting with specialized blood plasma.
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And sea slugs eat jellyfish nematocysts,
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prevent their activation with compounds in their mucus,
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and repurpose them for their own defenses.
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The bombardier beetle is no exception:
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the toads that swallow them
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can tolerate the caustic spray that Darwin found so distasteful.
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Most of the beetles are spit up hours later,
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amazingly alive and well.
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But how do the toads survive the experience?
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That is still a mystery.
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