"Weird Mucus Parasites Are Actually Jellyfish"

CavLancer

This aint fertilizer
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Why does this make me feel sick? I mean I've swapped spit with a vast amount of women in my younger years, was I swapping fish at the same time? Are there any other human body parts full of fish??!?

http://news.yahoo.com/weird-mucus-parasites-actually-jellyfish-143436328.html

Spoiler :

Weird Mucus Parasites Are Actually Jellyfish
LiveScience.com By Charles Q. Choi
13 hours ago

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Weird Mucus Parasites Are Actually Jellyfish
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View photo
Spores from the myxozoan Kudoa iwatai (left); this group was found to be closely related to jellyfish, like the moon jelly (Aurelia aurita, right).

Microscopic parasites only a few cells large are essentially greatly degenerated jellyfish, a finding that could expand the definition of the animal kingdom, researchers say.

"When people think of an animal, they think of a macroscopic, multicellular, complex organism, and now they'll have to expand their definition of an animal to include very simple microscopic organisms," study co-author Paulyn Cartwright, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Kansas,told Live Science.

Investigators analyzed myxozoans, a very diverse group of more than 2,100 microscopic parasites whose name means "mucus animals" in Greek, which refers to how scientists thought they were once associated with slime molds. [See Amazing Photos of Jellyfish Swarms]

Myxozoans commonly plague commercial fish, infecting them as part of their life cycle. For instance, they can cause whirling disease in trout and salmon, where the parasites attack the brain and spinal cord and make fish start swimming in circles.

Although scientists have investigated myxozoans since the 1880s, much about the evolutionary origins of these parasites was uncertain.

"Some people originally thought they were single-celled organisms," Cartwright said in a statement. "But when their DNA was sequenced, researchers started to surmise they were animals — just really weird ones."

For instance, prior research found that myxozoans lack so-called Hox genes, which are generally vital to embryonic development in animals. "Because they're so weird, it's difficult to imagine they were jellyfish," Cartwright said in a statement.

Myxozoans are extremely simple organisms consisting of just a few cells and lacking a mouth or a gut. However, previous research found that myxozoans possess complex structures that resemble the stinging cells of cnidarians, the group that includes jellyfish, corals and sea anemones.

After the researchers analyzed genomes from two distantly related myxozoan species, they found the parasites are actually cnidarians. They were most closely related to medusozoans, the cnidarians that include jellyfish.

"This is a remarkable case of extreme degeneration of an animal body plan," Cartwright said in a statement.

The myxozoans not only had stripped-down bodies — the bell-shaped part of a traditional jellyfish — but also had drastically simplified genomes.

"These were 20 to 40 times smaller than average jellyfish genomes," Cartwright said in the statement. "It's one of the smallest animal genomes ever reported. It only has about 20 million base pairs, whereas the average cnidarian has over 300 million. These are tiny little genomes by comparison." (Humans, for comparison, are equipped with 3 billion pairs of bases in our genomes.)

This degeneration of the genome was unexpected. "A lot of small organisms have big genomes, and big organisms can have small genomes," Cartwright said. "I think the easiest explanation for what happened with myxozoans was that they experienced an extreme case of degeneration to just a few cells, and many genes were no longer needed."

The researchers now want to learn more about how this degeneration occurred.

"First, we confirmed they're cnidarians," Cartwright said in the statement. "Now we need to investigate how they got to be that way."

Future research might turn up other instances of such extreme degeneration.

"It would be hard to recognize such animals because they would look so different from their closest relatives," Cartwright said. "I think with new technologies such as whole-genome sequencing, we can better identify the evolutionary origins of some of these strange creatures."

The scientists detailed their findings online today (Nov. 16) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
 
Sometimes swimming in the sea i find the typical umbrella-shaped big jellyfish with several meters long tentacles. It is always a disturbing thing to stare at, like seeing an alien. Fortunately it always swim near the bottom, wont like to find myself tangled in those tentacles.
 
Afaik we do not have any lethal ones here, but we surely have those that can attack you with their harpoon-like tentacles, and this may not hurt at first but a couple of hours later you will be in actual agony...

They aren't uncommon either.

Still better than Australia, where they even have a species of jellyfish that is millimeters in length, yet typically lethal ;)
Iirc called 'Irukanji jellyfish', and is mostly found in the great coral reef.
 
Yep, the big ones are not lethal, not even dangerous, however a couple of years ago we had an invasion of the bad ones, aka Portuguese man o' war (physalia physalis) here in the Atlantic coast at southern Spain after a couple of weeks of strong wind blowing from the south-west.

I watched it in TV and was like, meh, surely they have seen a bunch somewhere and got it out of proportion. But later that day went to the beach and it was literally full of them all around the sand. Amazing. Beaches were closed for almost a month. It is not an authentic jellyfish i think, but those little guys can become even lethal if you get stung several times. It has nice colors though.
carabela-portuguesa-campillo.jpg


Never seem any again since then.
 
Spain is right there by Portugal, I'd think some sort of an invasion would sort things out.

Kyriakos, yes, reason # 9,194,731 never to go to Australia and if you do accidentally go, never go swimming that reef.
 
Yep, the big ones are not lethal, not even dangerous, however a couple of years ago we had an invasion of the bad ones, aka Portuguese man o' war (physalia physalis) here in the Atlantic coast at southern Spain after a couple of weeks of strong wind blowing from the south-west.

I watched it in TV and was like, meh, surely they have seen a bunch somewhere and got it out of proportion. But later that day went to the beach and it was literally full of them all around the sand. Amazing. Beaches were closed for almost a month. It is not an authentic jellyfish i think, but those little guys can become even lethal if you get stung several times. It has nice colors though.
carabela-portuguesa-campillo.jpg


Never seem any again since then.

:eek:

Never saw any such jellyfish, and i suppose (as you said) they never reach the Med anyway.

Btw, greek term for jellyfish is Medousa. As in the Medusa. Which in turn meant 'female ruler' (it is just the feminine form of the ancient term for ruler/archon, "medon" )...
A Homeric term, in fact. "(Gorgon) Daughter of Forkyn, ruler (medontos) of the never-ending sea", etc.
 
You could hardly find it in the Med since they come from the sargasso sea in the middle of the ocean, near Bahamas reaching European Atlantic coast very ocasionally. Never were seem in Spain before, not in such numbers at least. Of course some smartass said it was all due to climate change.
 
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