Axolotls: The salamanders that snack on each other (but don't die) - Luis Zambrano

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2021-06-22 ・ TED-Ed


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Axolotls: The salamanders that snack on each other (but don't die) - Luis Zambrano

3,974,461 views ・ 2021-06-22

TED-Ed


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

00:06
In 1864, French zoologist August Duméril
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was baffled while investigating the axolotl.
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Unlike many other amphibians, which transform into terrestrial adults,
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axolotls retain their juvenile characteristics and never leave the water.
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In an attempt to induce metamorphosis,
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Duméril spent months removing their gills.
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But in most instances, the axolotls simply... grew them back.
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Indeed, axolotls are masters of regeneration:
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they can flawlessly regenerate body parts
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ranging from amputated limbs and crushed spines to parts of their eyes and brains.
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So how do they do it? And what other secrets are they keeping?
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This extraordinary salamander is native to the wetlands in Mexico City.
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Ancient Aztec people considered it the incarnation of a God named Xolotl—
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hence the axolotl’s name, roughly meaning “water monster.”
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Axolotls reach sexual maturity with gills and a tadpole-like dorsal fin.
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Scientists think their forever-young condition, called “neoteny,”
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evolved because of their stable habitat.
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For salamanders that develop in waters that dry up,
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efficiently transitioning to land is essential.
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But the lakes axolotls evolved in were unchanging year-round
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and didn't host many aquatic predators.
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So, scientists think it was advantageous for axolotls
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to forgo the demands of metamorphosis.
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However, they haven’t completely lost this ability.
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If exposed to certain substances, axolotls will turn into adults.
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But they’ll often experience shorter lifespans
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and lose some of their self-healing abilities.
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These regenerative talents may seem like crazy superpowers to begin with,
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but axolotls have good use for them.
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As babies, they’re in direct competition.
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So, they snack on each other.
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This is usually not a huge problem thanks to how quickly
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they can regenerate body parts.
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When an axolotl loses a limb, tissues stimulate growth in the area.
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Skin cells divide and cover the wound.
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Then, progenitor cells, which can develop into various bodily tissues,
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form a mass at the site of injury
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and nearby nerves secrete growth-promoting proteins.
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Over the next few weeks, a new limb emerges
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as cells proliferate and differentiate in coordination.
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This process could potentially lead to uncontrolled growth and tumor formation.
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But axolotls are remarkably resistant to cancer.
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They have a system in place that tightly controls cellular proliferation.
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To better understand the axolotl’s baffling biology,
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scientists sequenced its genome.
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They found it to be more than ten times longer than a human’s.
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Mutations can change the length of any animal’s genome.
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For whatever reason, salamanders have much more DNA than other vertebrates
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because they lose parts of it less frequently.
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Investigating the axolotl’s genome, scientists saw many repeated sequences,
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most of which don't code for proteins and have no known function.
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They also found genes that are key in regeneration.
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However, the biggest factor that sets axolotl regeneration apart
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may not be a set of unique genes, but how they regulate their genes.
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It’s no wonder that axolotls are one of science’s most studied animals.
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But their population in the wild has plummeted.
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Hundreds of years ago, axolotls thrived under the Aztec capital.
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Within the surrounding lakes,
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Aztec people built islands called chinampas for growing crops.
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This highly productive form of agriculture created a vast system of canals,
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expanding the lake system’s shallow, sheltered habitat—
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the axolotls’ ideal environment.
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But when Spanish invaders arrived, they began draining the lakes.
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And even more water has been diverted in recent years.
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Today, the entire population of wild axolotls is found in just one place,
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Lake Xochimilco, where it’s threatened by pollution and invasive fishes.
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People are working to regenerate the ecosystem
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and strengthen the 2,000 year old chinampa farming tradition.
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If interest grows, farmers could recover abandoned chinampas
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and support the local community— along with the axolotl.
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Eventually, the benefits of saving this salamander might be even greater.
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Scientists hope that one day we’ll be able to apply
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the axolotl’s masterful tumor suppression and regenerative abilities
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to the human body.
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Perhaps its secrets are the real reason for the slimy god monster’s smile.
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