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SACCULINA CARCINI: TAKE FULL CONTROL THROUGH THE TRANSFORMATION


natord (66)in #nature • 7 years ago (edited)

I have written an artistic introduction for articles about parasites so many
times, that I have run out of metaphors. But, I can guarantee that you will
surprised again. Our guest is the kind of parasites that change their carriers
completely and irrevocably and remain with them for life.




image source



Let me introduce Sacculina carcini- arthropod creatures from a detachment of
crustaceans, which parasitize on crabs. The process of capture of the host and
gain control over its body makes me think “Thanks God I’m Human!”.


PHASE 1



Sacculina at the stage of the nauplius
Sacculina at the stage of the nauplius is indistinguishable from other
representatives of plankton. This is a very small animal, measuring just a few
millimeters without a shell and with a bunch of sensitive tendrils. However, it
develops very quickly.



4-5 days after birth, the larva begins to grow a shell, this is a turning point
for females. Sacculina should find a carrier (crab) as soon as possible to stay
with him for life. With the help of special organs on legs, the larva catches
the smell of a crab of a suitable species and begins actively flutter in the
water, until she reach the victim's body.

Then the larva finds a suitable place to "enter", usually it is the joints on
claw or damage in the shell. On this stage, the parasite undergoes an amazing
metamorphosis. Sacculina drops her shell and simultaneously grows on her head an
acute hollow spike.

Using the spike, the larva bites into the body of the crab and discards the rest
of the body (trunk with all organs, limbs and shell). Through the cavity in the
spike, she injects the head part into the body of the carrier.




Moving the parasite cells through the spike (Thecostraca (Crustacea) source



WHAT IS STRIKING IS THAT THIS PARASITE DOESN’T LEAVE ANY PART OF ITS BODY INSIDE
THE HOST, BUT TRANSFERS ITSELF IN THE FORM OF A MICROSCOPIC ACCUMULATION OF
CELLS, WHICH LATER WILL DEVELOP INTO A COMPLEX PARASITIC SYSTEM.




PHASE 2



The cells of the parasite move into the nutrient medium of the intestinal tract
of the carrier, and begin actively to divide and grow, forming a new parasite
body with root-like appendages. Parasitic outgrowths gradually envelope all the
organs of a crab and can even reach the eyeballs. Thus, we can see the organism
completely different from the original larva.




A- Sacculina during the growth stage after anchoring in the intestine. B-
primary stage of the larva. image source



Sacculina lives by absorbing nutrients from the blood of her carrier, not
causing him critical harm. Infected crabs often live even longer than their
healthy counterparts. Like many other parasites, Sacculina is trying to "care"
about her carrier. Otherwise, with such type of a symbiosis, she will die with
him.




The final stage of parasite development before reproduction. image source






The whole body of the carrier (inside) is entangled by parasitic growths.image
source



Over time, the parasitic body expands so much that it climbs out in the area of
the crab's belly (where female crabs carry their eggs). This is an adult formed
female specimen of Sacculina in the form of a sack-like smooth outgrowth,
without eyes, mouth and other visible organs. The carrier still does not feel
serious discomfort and changes at this stage.


PHASE 3



When Sacculina is ready for mating, she begins radically change not only the
behavior of the host, but also his physiology:

 * The crab stops shedding and discarding the shell, not to damage the sack on
   the belly. Also, the carrier stops growing.
 * The parasite destroys the reproductive organs of the carrier (parasitic
   castration).
 * The crab loses the ability to regenerate damaged claws (what is not difficult
   for healthy individuals).

Thus, the most energy-consuming abilities of the organism are disconnected in
order to redirect the released resources into the body of the parasite. Now the
parasite and its offspring will be able to obtain the necessary amount of
nutrients. Not being able to reproduce, the crab spends all his forces to eat
and cares about the outgrowth on his abdomen, which he perceives as own
offspring.

Sacculina can parasitize on both sexes of crabs. If the male becomes the host,
he begins to behave just like the female.





Then, Sacculina begins to spread pheromones and on her body opens a tiny hole
for the penetration of the male. Free-swimming males of the parasite has time to
build up the shell during its short life. So to crawl through the hole and reach
the eggs, they use the previously described strategy of their partners - discard
most part of the body.

10 HOURS LATER AFTER PENETRATION, THE MALE REACHES THE DESTINATION, ALONG THE
WAY DROPPING THE REMAINS OF THE SHELL. FOR THE REST OF HIS LIFE HE WILL LIVE
DEEP IN THE BODY OF THE FEMALE, CONTINUALLY PRODUCING SPERM TO FERTILIZE THE
EGGS. USUALLY SACCULINA ABLE TO ACCEPT TWO MALES, TO INCREASE THE HETEROZYGOSITY
OF OFFSPRING.



The crab-carrier continues to care about the outgrowth on his stomach, removing
with it the algae and fungi. When the larvae are ready to leave the mother's
body, the crab finds a high rock, climbs on it and starts swinging his claws in
different directions. Thus, he creates an additional flows which helps the
offspring of Sacculina to leave the bag and get into the ocean currents, to
repeat the cycle…




image source




***

AS I SAID, IN MY OPINION, THIS TYPE OF PARASITES IS THE MOST FRIGHTENING AND
AMAZING AT THE SAME TIME. IMAGINE THAT ANOTHER ORGANISM DOES NOT JUST LIVE AT
THE EXPENSE OF THE BASIC PROCESSES THAT TAKE PLACE IN YOUR BODY, BUT CHANGES
YOUR BODY AND BEHAVIOR DRASTICALLY, FOR HIS OWN PURPOSES. IN THIS CASE, THE BODY
OF THE CARRIER IS NOT JUST AN INCUBATOR, BUT A FULL-FLEDGED ORGANISM, TAKEN
UNDER FULL CONTROL. IN FACT, THE PARASITE BECOMES THE PILOT OF THE NEW
SUPER-BODY, WHICH SIGNIFICANTLY EXPANDS ITS CAPABILITIES.




image source



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

sources: Sacculina WiKi, Nauplius, NatGeo. Zombie Crab, www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov,
Sacculina carcini, ianimal, Parasitologyblog images from Google Search.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------















#steemstem #steemiteducation #science #busy
7 years ago in #nature by natord (66)
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adventureevryday (64) 7 years ago 

Yikes. This parasite "cares" for its host so that it lives long as you
say...personally if I were the crab id prefer just to die early if this thing
got me. Makes me glad im not a crab anyways.

Great article.

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natord (66) 7 years ago 

Keep in mind that this parasite changes your cognitive ability. You would have
thought you are pregnant and must to protect your offspring in the first place
:)

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[-]

arhaynez (47) 7 years ago (edited)

Wow I did not know this. This sort of reminds me of the wasp (can't remember the
name) which lays it's eggs inside of a caterpillar. the only difference being
the caterpillar ends up dead... Thanks for sharing @natord once again another
great post.

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natord (66) 7 years ago 

This wasp? :) Many creatures use their prey as a cocoon for posterity, it is
also pretty creepy.

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arhaynez (47) 7 years ago (edited)

And there you go another wasp that uses a similar strategy to reproduce the
Tarantula hawk. This was actually what i was talking about just did some
searching and the name potter wasp came up. But the tarantula wasp is something
else there... and yes they are creepy but amazing nonetheless.

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abdullahshoaib (47) 7 years ago 

All of your information is incredible and well researched, keep up dude and keep
sharing like this in future, I appreciate your work.

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natord (66) 7 years ago 

Thank you, I am very pleased to hear such kind words!

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abdullahshoaib (47) 7 years ago 

Always my pleasure

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[-]

tonyy01 (46) 7 years ago 

wow I really like it, the post you share is very good,
thank you so much for sharing useful postings,

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natord (66) 7 years ago 

Thank you for reading and following :)

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nicomax (53) 7 years ago 

interesante organismo parasitario. Saludos @natord.

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maurelvys (59) 7 years ago 

Wow, the world is full of many strange creatures. regards @natord

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