These animals are also plants … wait, what? - Luka Seamus Wright

1,464,634 views ・ 2022-06-14

TED-Ed


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

00:07
Take a good look at this slug.
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No, not that— that’s a leaf.
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This slug.
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There we go.
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Elysia chlorotica may not look like much—
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okay, it looks like a bright green leaf—
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but it’s one of the most extraordinary creatures around.
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Living in salt marshes along the east coast of North America,
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it can go about a year without eating.
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During that time, it lives like a plant.
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00:36
Generally speaking, animals are what are called heterotrophs,
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meaning they can’t produce their own food— they’re consumers of other life.
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Plants, meanwhile, are autotrophs, or producers:
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they can synthesize their own fuel from sunlight, CO2,
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and other inorganic compounds.
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Plants do this by using organelles called chloroplasts,
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which give them their bright colors
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01:01
and convert sunlight into food through photosynthesis.
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Elysia is what’s called a mixotroph:
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01:09
it can both consume food, like animals,
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01:11
and produce its own through photosynthesis, like plants.
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01:15
In fact, Elysia steals its ability to photosynthesize
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01:19
from the algae it eats by piercing the algal cells
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with specialized pointy teeth, called radula.
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It sucks the cell empty and digests most of its contents,
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but the chloroplasts remain intact.
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They’re incorporated into the epithelial cells lining Elysia’s digestive system
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that branches throughout its flat body.
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This makes the slug look even more leaflike,
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providing camouflage as well as food.
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As incredible as this adaptation is,
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there are more than 70 species of slug that steal chloroplasts from their food.
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What makes Elysia and a few closely related species
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in the Mediterranean and Pacific unique
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is how long they can hold onto chloroplasts—
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most other slugs keep them for a few weeks at most.
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This longevity seems to be due to the survival abilities
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of both plastids and slugs.
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Specifically, the chloroplasts of certain algae
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can repair their own light-harvesting systems,
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while most chloroplasts are thought to rely on their host cell
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and its genes for repairs.
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This makes the chloroplasts able to sustain themselves
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for longer inside the slug.
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Meanwhile, the slug adjusts its gene expression
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to improve its relationship with the chloroplasts
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and removes damaged plastids
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to avoid accumulation of potentially damaging chemicals.
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Though few species can steal organelles from another species’ cell,
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these slugs are far from alone in getting an assist from plants.
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Organisms as diverse as corals,
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giant clams and sponges have symbiotic algae living inside their cells,
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supplying them with organic compounds through photosynthesis.
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In turn, they supply their little helpers with shelter and inorganic compounds.
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Some of these mixotrophs even transmit the algae to their offspring.
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Without the aid of these algae,
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filter-feeding corals, clams, and sponges would not gain enough nutrition
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in the nutrient-poor tropical ocean,
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and the dazzling coral reefs they build simply would not exist.
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Mixotrophy even cuts both ways:
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an alga called Tripos furca can consume several microscopic animals a day,
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allowing it to survive in darkness for weeks.
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Tripos is in turn eaten by other mixotrophic algae,
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providing frequent opportunity for exchange of organelles
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such as chloroplasts.
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This seems to allow some algae to survive in parts of the dark ocean
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such as the Mariana Trench,
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which plants otherwise wouldn't be able to inhabit.
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The processes by which Elysia becomes photosynthetic
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and Tripos switches between feeding modes
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are reminiscent of what scientists believe led to the origin of all plants.
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Single-celled animals preyed on cyanobacteria.
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Some of these tiny plants were not digested and lived on in the animal cells,
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eventually giving rise to chloroplasts.
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But these first eukaryotic plants were soon consumed by other animals,
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which hijacked the precious chloroplast, just like Elysia.
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And following the example of eating and being eaten,
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we’ve seen in the case of Tripos,
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this chloroplast heist happened up to three times,
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giving rise to plastids with four membranes
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and the ocean’s most productive plants and forests.
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