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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, okay, it looks like a bright green leaf, but
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it's one of the most extraordinary creatures around.
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Living in salt marshes along the east coast of North America, it can go about a year without
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eating.
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During that time, it lives like a plant.
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Generally speaking, animals are what are called heterotrophs, meaning they can't produce their
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own food.
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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, and other inorganic compounds.
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Plants do this by using organelles called chloroplasts, which give them their bright
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colors and convert sunlight into food through photosynthesis.
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Elysia is what's called a mixotroph.
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It can both consume food, like animals, and produce its own through photosynthesis, like
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plants.
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In fact, Elysia steals its ability to photosynthesize from the algae it eats by piercing the algal
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cells with specialized pointy teeth called radula.
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It sucks the cell empty and digests most of its contents, but the chloroplasts remain
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intact.
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They're incorporated into the epithelial cells lining Elysia's digestive system that branches
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throughout its flat body.
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This makes the slug look even more leaf-like, providing camouflage as well as food.
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As incredible as this adaptation is, there are more than 70 species of slug that steal
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chloroplasts from their food.
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What makes Elysia and a few closely related species 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 of both plastids and slugs.
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Specifically, the chloroplasts of certain algae can repair their own light-harvesting
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systems, while most chloroplasts are thought to rely on their host cell and its genes for
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repairs.
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This makes the chloroplasts able to sustain themselves for longer inside this slug.
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Meanwhile, the slug adjusts its gene expression to improve its relationship with the chloroplasts
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and removes damaged plastids to avoid accumulation of potentially damaging chemicals.
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Though few species can steal organelles from another species' cell, these slugs are far
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from alone in getting an assist from plants.
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Organisms as diverse as corals, giant clams, and sponges have symbiotic algae living inside
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their cells, 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 myxotrophs even transmit the algae to their offspring.
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Without the aid of these algae, filter-feeding corals, clams, and sponges would not gain
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enough nutrition in the nutrient-poor tropical ocean, and the dazzling coral reefs they build
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simply would not exist.
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Myxotrophy even cuts both ways.
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An alga called Tryposphorica can consume several microscopic animals a day, allowing
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it to survive in darkness for weeks.
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Trypos is in turn eaten by other myxotrophic algae, providing frequent opportunity for
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exchange of organelles such as chloroplasts.
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This seems to allow some algae to survive in parts of the dark ocean such as the Mariana
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Trench, which plants otherwise wouldn't be able to inhabit.
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The processes by which Elysia becomes photosynthetic and Trypos 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, eventually
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giving rise to chloroplasts.
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But these first eukaryotic plants were soon consumed by other animals, which hijacked
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the precious chloroplast just like Elysia.
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And following the example of eating and being eaten, we've seen in the case of Trypos,
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this chloroplast heist happened up to three times, giving rise to plastids with more membranes
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and the ocean's most productive plants and forests.
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This slug-slash-plant is just one of millions of species that uses crafty evolutionary adaptations
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to survive.
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Take the orchid.
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Just a pretty flowering plant, right?
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Wrong.
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Find out about their sneaky tactics of deception with this video.
These animals are also plants
Elysia chlorotica의 기본 특징
- 밝은 초록색 잎처럼 보이는 바다달팽이로 북미 동부 해안 염습지에 서식
- 최대 약 1년 동안 먹이를 먹지 않고도 생존 가능
- 이 기간 동안 사실상 식물처럼 광합성으로 에너지를 얻음
영양 방식: 종속영양, 자가영양, 혼합영양
- 동물: 종속영양생물(heterotroph)로 스스로 유기물을 만들지 못해 다른 생물을 섭취
- 식물: 자가영양생물(autotroph)로 빛, \(CO_2\), 무기물로 광합성을 통해 유기물 합성
- 식물의 광합성 기관: 엽록체(chloroplast)가 색을 부여하고 빛 에너지를 화학 에너지로 전환
- Elysia: 혼합영양생물(mixotroph)로 동물처럼 먹고, 식물처럼 광합성도 수행
엽록체 도둑질 메커니즘
- 조류(algae)를 먹을 때 뾰족한 치설(radula)로 세포를 찔러 내용물을 빨아들임
- 대부분의 세포 성분은 소화하지만, 엽록체는 손상 없이 남김
- 남은 엽록체는 달팽이의 소화관을 이루는 상피세포에 흡수·편입됨
- 소화관이 납작한 몸 전체로 뻗어 있어 몸 전체가 잎처럼 초록색이 되고, 위장은 동시에 위장(胃腸)과 위장(僞裝)의 기능 수행
엽록체 유지 능력과 장수 비밀
- 엽록체를 훔치는 바다달팽이는 70종 이상 존재
- 대부분은 몇 주만 유지하지만, Elysia와 일부 근연종은 수개월 이상 유지 가능
- 원인 ①: 특정 조류의 엽록체가 스스로 광수확 시스템을 수리하는 능력을 보유
- 원인 ②: 대부분 엽록체는 원래 숙주 세포의 유전자에 의존하지만, 이 경우 독자 생존력이 높음
- 원인 ③: 달팽이는 유전자 발현을 조절해 엽록체와의 상호작용을 강화하고, 손상된 엽록체를 제거해 유해 물질 축적 방지
다른 생물의 혼합영양과 공생
- 산호, 대왕조개, 해면 등은 세포 안에 공생 조류를 지님
- 조류: 광합성으로 유기물을 제공
- 동물: 조류에 거주 공간과 무기물을 제공
- 일부 혼합영양생물은 이 조류를 자손에게 직접 전달
- 이 공생 없이는 열대의 빈영양 바다에서 충분한 영양 확보가 불가능하며, 산호초 생태계 자체가 성립하지 못함
먹이 모드 전환과 심해 생존 전략
- Tryposphorica: 하루에 여러 미세 동물을 섭취할 수 있는 조류
- 빛이 없는 환경에서도 수 주간 생존 가능
- Trypos는 다시 다른 혼합영양 조류의 먹이가 되어 엽록체 등 세포 소기관 교환 기회 제공
- 이러한 소기관 교환 덕분에 일부 조류는 마리아나 해구 같은 암흑 심해에서도 생존 가능
식물과 엽록체의 기원과 반복된 ‘도둑질’
- 과거 단세포 동물이 시아노박테리아(원시 광합성 세균)를 포식
- 일부 세균이 소화되지 않고 세포 안에 남아 공생 → 엽록체의 기원으로 추정
- 이 초기 진핵식물도 다시 다른 동물에게 먹혀 엽록체를 빼앗기는 일이 반복
- Trypos 사례처럼 먹고 먹히는 과정에서 엽록체 ‘탈취’가 최대 세 번까지 일어났다는 증거
- 그 결과 막 수가 더 많은 다양한 형태의 소기관(plastid)이 생겨났고, 이는 해양의 가장 생산적인 식물과 해양 숲을 형성
진화적 적응의 다양성
- Elysia와 같은 ‘달팽이-식물’은 생존을 위해 조류의 엽록체를 훔쳐 쓰는 극단적 전략을 사용
- 이는 수많은 종이 각기 다른 교묘한 적응을 통해 환경에 적응해 왔음을 시사
- 예고된 예시: 난초 역시 단순한 관상식물이 아니라, 수분자를 속이는 정교한 속임수 전략을 보유
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