logo
What makes a hermit crab more bold? Hairy claws.

What makes a hermit crab more bold? Hairy claws.

Yahoo14 hours ago
If you've ever sifted along a tide pool or visited a souvenir stand on a coastal boardwalk, you may have seen a hermit crab. These crustaceans that have been on Earth for roughly 500 million years, are always alert, monitoring their surroundings for any perceived threats. Like turtles, they will retract into their shells if they detect any danger. Once that initial shock passes, these crabs will use sensory organs in order to decide if it is safe to emerge and get back to business.
To gather data about their surroundings, Pagurus bernhardus, a common hermit crab species, uses small hair-like structures called sensilla. According to a study published July 2 in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, crabs with more of these sensory hairs on their claws appear to recover faster when startled and may make bolder decisions. These more hairy-clawed animals were also more predictable in how much time it took for them to recover from their initial fright.
'For this study, I was especially intrigued by how they used their claws and other sensory appendages, such as their antennae, in their explorations and when re-emerging from their shell,' Ari Drummond, a study co-author and marine biologist at the University of Plymouth in England, said in a statement. 'The patterns I observed led me to wonder if these hermit crabs might be using their claws to help assess risk from the environment.'
Drummond and her team initially analyzed how individual Pagurus bernhardus hermit crabs responded when startled in a lab. They then waited for each crab to shed its skin and collected the moulted claw tissue. Next, they put the shed tissue under a scanning electron microscope at the Plymouth Electron Microscopy Centre (PEMC) to examine it in greater detail. The microscopes allowed the team to mark all of the sensilla on the surface of a crab's claw, without removing the limbs from living crustaceans.
Lastly, they looked to see if the number of sensilla was related to the relative boldness of each individual crab.
The analysis revealed that the bolder hermit crabs have more sensilla located on the claw's surface. Additionally, more sensilla appears to make the crab determine that the surrounding environment lacks risk more consistently. This basically suggests that more sensilla equals better access to information.
This relationship between sensory ability and relative boldness led to a new hypothesis about how sensation and animal behavior could be linked. The team calls this 'sensory investment syndrome,' and hopes that it inspires more study into how sensory traits influence both animal personality and decision-making.
'We've known for a long time that individual animals of the same species can show consistent behavioural differences from one another,' study co-author and University of Plymouth marine biologist Mark Briffa said in a statement. 'Our new research suggests that in hermit crabs, some of this variation may be linked to how individuals sense the world around them. This possibility has been largely overlooked, but if sensory investment helps explain personality in hermit crabs, it may do so in other animals as well.'
'In a world where environments and species are increasingly at risk from human impacts on the environment, I believe it is essential that we gain a better understanding of what information animals detect, how they use that information and then respond to stay alive,' concluded Drummond.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Researchers discover certain gut bacteria can protect you from toxic plastics that increase cancer risks
Researchers discover certain gut bacteria can protect you from toxic plastics that increase cancer risks

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Researchers discover certain gut bacteria can protect you from toxic plastics that increase cancer risks

Could your gut protect you from the toxic impacts of forever chemicals? Forever chemicals, also known as 'PFAS,' are long-lasting, synthetic chemicals that have been used in consumer products around the world since the 1950s. They're found in waterproof clothing, non-stick pans, plastic food packaging, and firefighting foams. Exposure to the chemicals may be tied to negative health impacts, including fertility, developmental delays in children, a weakened immune system, increased cholesterol levels, and a heightened risk of some cancers. There are thousands of forever chemicals that have potentially varying effects and toxicity levels. Now, scientists say they've discovered that some bacteria found in the human gut have the ability to absorb the chemicals — and potentially protect from associated health impacts. 'We found that certain species of human gut bacteria have a remarkably high capacity to soak up PFAS from their environment at a range of concentrations, and store these in clumps inside their cells,' Dr. Kiran Patil, a member of the British University of Cambridge's MRC Toxicology Unit, explained in a statement. 'Due to aggregation of PFAS in these clumps, the bacteria themselves seem protected from the toxic effects.' Patil was the senior author of the research, which was published in the journal Nature Microbiology. To reach these conclusions, the researchers inserted several species of bacteria from the human gut into mice. The study found that nine species of the bacteria gathered the forever chemicals the rodents ate and then pooped out. When exposed to increasing levels of the chemicals, the bacteria worked even harder, consistently removing the same percentage of the toxic chemicals. Within just minutes of exposure, the bacterial species soaked up between a quarter and nearly two-thirds of the forever chemicals. The same effect has not yet been tested in humans, but the researchers said they plan to use their findings to create probiotic dietary supplements that boost the levels of these species in the gut to shield against any PFAS-related health harms. They are also looking at how they could turbo-charge the species' performance. 'The reality is that PFAS are already in the environment and in our bodies, and we need to try and mitigate their impact on our health now,' Dr. Indra Roux, a researcher at the University of Cambridge's MRC Toxicology Unit and a co-author of the study, said. Until then, the researchers say the best thing people can do to protect themselves is to avoid known risks for exposure. Although, even tap water has been contaminated: nearly half of all tap water in America. Under the Trump administration, the Environmental Protection Agency moved to weaken Biden-era standards limiting the pollution of potentially-toxic 'forever chemicals' in U.S. drinking water sources earlier this year. 'PFAS were once considered safe, but it's now clear that they're not,' added fellow researcher Dr. Anna Lindell. 'It's taken a long time for PFAS to become noticed because at low levels they're not acutely toxic. But they're like a slow poison.'

Enrolment concludes in Belite Bio's trial of Tinlarebant for geographic atrophy
Enrolment concludes in Belite Bio's trial of Tinlarebant for geographic atrophy

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Enrolment concludes in Belite Bio's trial of Tinlarebant for geographic atrophy

Belite Bio has completed enrolment in the 24-month PHOENIX Phase III trial assessing the tolerability and safety of oral Tinlarebant in individuals with geographic atrophy (GA) in dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD). This multicentre, randomised, placebo-controlled, double-masked, global trial is crucial in evaluating the therapy's potential to minimise the atrophic lesion growth rate in these patients. It has enrolled 500 participants across various sites in the US, the UK, the Czech Republic, France, Switzerland, Taiwan, Australia, and China. Tinlarebant, a one-daily tablet, is being developed as an early intervention to preserve retinal tissue health and integrity in those with Stargardt disease type 1 (STGD1) and GA. At present, there are no treatments approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for STGD1 and no approved oral treatments for GA. The tablet has received fast track, rare paediatric disease, and breakthrough therapy designations in the US, orphan drug status in the US, Japan, and Europe, and Sakigake designation in Japan for STGD1. Tinlarebant is also being evaluated in a Phase III trial (DRAGON) and a Phase II/III trial (DRAGON II) for adolescent STGD1 individuals, in addition to the PHOENIX trial for GA subjects. Belite Bio CEO and chairman Dr Tom Lin said: 'Completing enrolment in the PHOENIX trial marks an important milestone for Belite Bio as we advance our lead candidate, Tinlarebant, for the treatment of geographic atrophy. 'This achievement brings us one step closer to evaluating the potential of Tinlarebant to slow atrophic lesion growth in this serious and progressive disease for which there are no approved oral treatments. There remains a significant unmet need for this patient population.' The company develops new treatments for degenerative retinal diseases like STGD1 and GA. Last year, the company submitted an application to the Japanese Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA) to initiate a trial of Tinlarebant for adolescent STGD1 treatment. "Enrolment concludes in Belite Bio's trial of Tinlarebant for geographic atrophy" was originally created and published by Clinical Trials Arena, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Sign in to access your portfolio

Roman bigfoot? UK archaeologists probe 'unusually large' shoes
Roman bigfoot? UK archaeologists probe 'unusually large' shoes

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Roman bigfoot? UK archaeologists probe 'unusually large' shoes

A stash of "unusually large" 2,000-year-old shoes dug up at a Roman site in northern England has left archaeologists searching for an explanation, they told AFP on Thursday. The 30cm+ (11.8in) long shoes -- equivalent to size 49 in Europe and size 15 in the US -- have been found by archaeologists from the Vindolanda Charity Trust in recent months. The trust was established in 1970 to excavate, conserve, and share Roman remains at Vindolanda and Carvoran, both part of the Hadrian's Wall World Heritage Site in northern England. The eight large shoes were discovered in a defensive ditch, often used by Romans as a rubbish dump, at the Magna Roman Fort in Northumberland. Only a tiny fraction of shoes in Vindolanda's vast existing collection are of a similar size, whereas around a quarter of those from the Magna site are in this size range, according to Rachel Frame, a senior archeologist on the project. She called it "really unusual". "We're all now off trying to work out who might have been here," Frame told AFP. She added they were eager to know "which regiments would have been stationed in Magda" and why exactly there are "so many large shoes at this site compared to others". The team reported finding the first "exceptionally large shoe" on May 21 and has continued to discover more since then, according to Vindolanda's website. "You need specific soil conditions with very low oxygen for organic objects made of things like wood, leather, textiles, stuff like that, to survive for this length of time," explained Frame. She noted the team are probing the history of the Roman Empire for answers, stressing people of different cultures and backgrounds would likely have been meeting at the site. "When people think about the Romans, they think about Italians, they sometimes forget just how broad the Empire was and how far it stretched," Frame said. jwp/jj/pdh/gv

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store