SciShow Tangents - Symbiosis
Episode Date: May 24, 2022When, in nature, two little guys are benefiting off each other one way or another, we call that symbiosis. But, if you think about it too hard, you start to realize that everything in nature is benefi...tting off some other thing in nature somehow and come to the conclusion that all of Earth is a giant symbiotic relationship! To that I say: simply try not to think about it too hard!SciShow Tangents is on YouTube! Go to www.youtube.com/scishowtangents to check out this episode with the added bonus of seeing our faces! Head to www.patreon.com/SciShowTangents to find out how you can help support SciShow Tangents, and see all the cool perks you’ll get in return, like bonus episodes and a monthly newsletter!And go to https://store.dftba.com/collections/scishow-tangents to buy your very own, genuine SciShow Tangents sticker!A big thank you to Patreon subscribers Garth Riley and Tom Mosner for helping to make the show possible!Follow us on Twitter @SciShowTangents, where we’ll tweet out topics for upcoming episodes and you can ask the science couch questions! While you're at it, check out the Tangents crew on Twitter: Ceri: @ceriley Sam: @im_sam_schultz Hank: @hankgreen[Fact Off]Figs and fig wasp cheating prevention https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1635526/https://www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/pollinators/pollinator-of-the-month/fig_wasp.shtmlhttps://news.cornell.edu/stories/2010/01/figs-kill-wasp-larvae-when-wasps-do-not-pollinate-figshttps://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rspb.2009.2157Magnetotactic bacteria in tissues of animals with magnetoreception  https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/09/200914112224.htm[Ask the Science Couch]Symbioses with more than 2 organismshttps://www.nature.com/scitable/knowledge/library/species-interactions-and-competition-102131429/https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8331144/https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17255511/https://www.princeton.edu/news/2019/06/27/sea-slugs-use-algaes-bacterial-weapons-factory-three-way-symbiotic-relationshiphttps://www.purdue.edu/newsroom/releases/2016/Q3/yeast-emerges-as-hidden-third-partner-in-lichen-symbiosis.htmlhttps://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/what-drives-a-sloths-ritualistic-trek-to-poop-180949419/[Butt One More Thing]Crab that lives in sea urchin rectumPicture: https://www.marinelifephotography.com/marine/arthropods/crabs/echinoecus-pentagonus.htmhttps://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/handle/10125/11997https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0022098178800070https://askabiologist.asu.edu/sea-urchin-anatomy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to SciShow Tangents.
It's the lightly competitive science knowledge showcase.
I'm your host, Hank Green, and join me this week as always is science expert, Sari Reilly.
Hello.
And our resident everyman, Sam Schultz.
Hello.
What is it all about, you guys?
You're supposed to be telling us that, I think.
Yeah, I'm just a spring chicken over here. I have to look to the old men in my life.
Oh, come on.
You three, to tell me what it's all about.
Oh, gosh.
You know, I remember when my dad turned 40 and thinking, wow, he's really sort of done.
Like they had a big party and there was like over the hill signs and like, like grave gravestone balloons.
And I,
and I sort of took that at face value,
which of course it was all in jest,
but I took it at face value.
And,
and,
and now I,
now I,
I do,
I do look at the,
the first digit in my age and I think,
wow,
that's a,
that's a four.
Holy shit.
Isn't your birthday in like two days also my
birthday happy birthday to me that's what we should be talking about let cancel everything
i just said well everybody my birthday just happened what did you get me oh uh
if somebody threw me an over the hill birthday party i would be
livid i think i can't handle that does any part of you
feel like you are done oh i definitely feel that i feel the age you know i got like that my knee
hurts sometimes and that way where it's like oh my it's just like it hurts um the back my ankles
there's like a ringing in my ears i have to take my glasses off to look at my phone when it's close to my face. Like all those memes of parents.
Yeah.
Yep.
All of that stuff has happened.
So can you fix any of those
for my birthday?
You got any ideas?
You should be taking fish oil for one.
I got you a bottle of fish oil.
Fish oil, vitamin D and exercise combined.
Yeah.
Some carrot seeds.
I got you those
so that you can grow them in your garden and eat some carrots.
I love carrot seeds.
They're my favorite kind of seed.
You could have just got him some carrots.
No, no, no.
He's got to work for them.
That's part of the growing old, too.
You've got to appreciate the little things, like watching a carrot sprout from the ground
so that you can pass it on to your children and be like, look at this, the magic of life.
And they're like, we can just go to the store and get a carrot, Dad.
He doesn't care.
Okay, so we fixed your squeaky knee and your eyeballs.
What's wrong with your eyes?
I can't see very good when it's close up.
Oh, that's the carrots.
That's the carrots.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, okay.
Well, we got you all sorted out.
And we started a GoFundMe for your real life gravestone to celebrate an over the hill holiday.
But they were surprisingly expensive.
I chipped in 20 bucks.
Sam chipped in 20 bucks.
And then we were like, this costs thousands of dollars.
It's a big piece of rock.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, the good news is that we'll put it into an interest bearing fund.
And in the future.
We can buy a lot of gravestones.
Yeah, you have to invest it.
And here's the thing,
I'm not going to die for at least 90, 100 years.
Okay, wait a minute.
Cool, cool.
So it'll really have appreciated by then.
What do you know that we don't know?
Yeah, for my birthday,
you have to tell me the secret to your immortality.
It's coming up in less than a month.
Every week here on Sam...
Every week here on Sam Jints...
Every week here on SciShow Sam Jints,
we get together to try to one-up a maze
and delight each other with science facts
while also trying to stay on topic.
This is a great turn of events for me.
Our panelists are playing for glory
and for Hank Bucks,
which I will be awarding as we play.
And at the end of the episode,
we will have a winner.
Now, as always,
we're going to introduce
this week's topic
with a traditional science poem
this week from Sari.
You may wonder why
we need a poem or song
because doesn't symbiosis
mean getting along?
Like when you vibe with a friend
and just get each other
or care for your cat
like you are its mother.
But we're not talking about
businessy handshakes or deals.
This is tangents where science backs up our appeals.
So let me introduce you to the symbiosis trio.
These three categories, though there are others we know.
First, mutualism is all buddy-buddy,
like clownfish and anemones, all sandy and muddy.
One cleans while one hides in
a tentacled nest. They keep each other safe through service and rest. Next, commensalism
is where they kind of share. One of them reaps rewards and the other doesn't care. Like a
barnacle hitching itself to a whale, it gets a home and a ride and there's no need to bail.
And then there are parasites, where hosts suffer in stride. Their partner takes nutrients as it clings on or inside,
whether it's mistletoe sucking life from a tree or a tapeworm in a dog or a mite on a bee.
So whether they're rude or birds of a feather, symbioses are whenever life sticks together,
which happens a lot across land, sea, and sky.
I guess we ought to get along if we are to survive.
Wow.
I learned, I laughed, I cried. You cried right now? see in sky i guess we ought to get along if we are to survive wow wow i learned i laughed i cried yeah you can see tears weeping you're pulling up your glasses too so they have room to fall out
it pulls up in there it's no good today's episode is about symbiotic relationships
sari you sort of outlined it for us we already know what symbiotic relationships. Sari, you sort of outlined it for us. We already know what symbiotic relationships are.
Yeah, I really tried to...
I don't like the expression.
Not have to do this part of the podcast.
I figured I had to write a poem.
I have to do the definition.
So now I'm going to try and do some double time.
Really make the most of my few hours
in this mortal coil.
We can make this part obsolete, I think, with enough work from you.
I feel like I've always learned that, like, to the common man,
symbiosis and parasitism are like opposites.
But parasitism is a symbiosis.
Yeah, so colloquially, symbiosis and parasitism, yeah, are like opposites where you use symbiosis to mean something good, parasite to mean something bad.
But biologically, symbiosis is just an umbrella term for like any sort of close relationship.
And the equivalent term for like a good relationship that benefits everything involved is mutualism.
like a good relationship that benefits everything involved is mutualism.
The first biological symbioses we kind of learned about as humans are parasites,
but we didn't call them symbioses.
And I don't know exactly what we called them, but we knew that there were like intestinal roundworms in people
and they were bothering people's tummies.
And this was like BCEce ancient egyptian
medical papyruses we knew parasites exist but it took us a while to establish this kind of
biological category of two species in a close relationship to each other and it started with
lichens which which surprised me.
I didn't think that people would be paying attention to those as far as symbioses, but
a lot of people were really into lichens.
They were like, these are weird creatures, fungus with an algae.
And they were like, what should we call it?
Because it's two things that are kind of living together.
And in 1873, one scientist suggested consortium
to describe the relationship.
Very official.
And then a German plant physiologist
suggested in 1877
the term symbiotismus,
which I think at some point
in the following decades,
we were like,
that's a little too fancy.
Let's just call it symbiosis.
Why do we have so many
why extra syllables? There's too many T's going on in there.
Let's, can you say it for me again?
Symbio-sym-tis-pis?
Symbiotismus.
That's sort of like on the opposite side of the
calendar from Christmas.
No.
We give our ticks little presents.
Yeah.
Instead of Santa, it's a dick.
So yeah, it was all lichenologists who were coming up with the words to describe the relationship.
And then from there, people started using symbiosis to describe other plants, mostly like root nodules on plants that were fungus or microbes okay um that helped with
nitrogen fixing later on we decided to do animals too this is where it's getting fuzzy now because
like algae like lichen as like this thing cannot live without this thing these things are they
don't even like they don't even separately exist they have co-evolved to the point where they're
basically kind of an individual organism and they're different species so you have to be different species i assume yes you do you can't be like
you and i cannot be in symbiosis just you guys hanging out that's just that's just codependence
but then like like a clownfish can live without a sea anemone and so it does seem a little bit
different to me where you've got this like there's like the mutualism where it's like really
in like basically they have evolved to interface with each other and on like almost a cellular
level and then there's like oh this is nice for both of us for you to be around but like if you're
not that's cool so what about like our gut microbiome or something is that because we can't
live without that right we could we we did a sideshow about
this and i was very surprised to find that you can live without a gut microbiome it's just like sucks
yeah just no that's good at it yeah but it is like a mutualistic relationship right but i see
the distinction that you're making as we push at the edges of this word like with any of the words
that we go with sideshow tangents then yeah yeah it definitely gets start it definitely starts to get fuzzy because relationships are all over ecosystems like is is an ecosystem
just a billion symbiotic relationships between every organism and and every other organism
well look we gotta call stuff something or else that's right you do have to call stuff trouble yeah we probably shouldn't
get the philosophers involved no definitely not uh there are a couple different terms so
competition is very is usually defined as separate from symbiosis which is instead of two
animals choosing to associate with each other competition is like they're both going for the
same apple both going for the same resource or both going for the same water or territory or
something and then predation is also considered separate from uh symbiosis because if you're just
eating another one that's not parasitism that's just you're eating it and then it's dead. And then you're the only one left.
It feels a little bit
like parasitism,
but except
it's real quick.
Yeah.
It's a quick parasitism.
So,
have we gotten
to the bottom of it?
No.
Are we close enough?
Definitely,
because we have to move on
to the quiz portion
of our show.
This week,
we're going to play a game
called Friend or Foe.
New game, huh?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Is it this or that?
It's like this or that, but it's Friend or Foe.
So as we have discussed, there are different kinds of symbioses.
There's mutualism and there's parasitism.
And today we're going to be playing the symbiotic version of this or that with Friend or Foe.
I'm going to name two organisms.
It's up to you to
decide what kind of relationship they have are they friend or are they foe and i'm also going
to award a bonus point because i feel like i don't give you y'all enough points if you can guess
the nature of the relationship so so not just like is it good or bad but what do they do to each other so round number one when the spotted
salamander ambistoma maculatum lays its eggs their embryos are not alone they are in the company of
another organism the algae oophila ambly stomatis that manages to take over the egg so are these two
friends bonded from before birth or are they foes with an eternal grudge match to play out?
I think my experience with SciShow Kids gives me the answer to this one.
Well, then Sari should go first.
I feel like algae is so benign.
So I would guess that they're friends.
You think so, do you?
Yeah.
And the egg is like, oh, hey, algae friend.
And then that algae hangs out and it photosynthesizes and it provides extra little nutrients for the embryo to go and grow big and strong.
What do you think, Sam?
Same exact answer.
I think that these are the guys that have this stuff under their skin and can photosynthesize.
So this algae colonizes salamander eggs
soon after the eggs are laid,
which gives the algae two opportunities to benefit.
In some cases, the algae are ectosymbiotic
and consume the nitrogenous waste
from the developing embryo,
providing oxygen and sugar in return.
So that's nice.
But the algae also have the chance
to get into the embryo
so that when the salamander is born,
the algae live in its tissues and cells. This is an environment stressful to the algae due to the limited oxygen,
but it gets nitrogen and phosphorates from its host. Instead, the relationship is the only known
example of algae living inside of a vertebrate that we know of in nature. We have done it in
labs. So yeah, it's a little photosynthetic salamander, and it's just too good to not know about.
I love when they're friends.
I like when they're friends too.
Maybe they're all going to be friends.
I bet not.
We'll see.
Round number two.
When the ants belonging to the genus Myrmica are finding a place to set up their nest,
they may find themselves becoming neighbors with the oregano plant,
which responds by releasing a chemical called carvacrol.
Is this chemical a welcome present from a friend,
or is it a warning sent from a foe?
I'm going to guess that they're friends,
because maybe it's a good stinky present where they're like,
ooh, come this way.
I feel your little pitter-pattering feet.
Come and crunch on me and then scatter my seeds i think i think
it's a i think it's a seed scattering mechanism where the oregano is like come this way you are
good at distributing things little ants bury me in your nest and then i will grow more oregano
that's better than come come to me ants consume my body yeah oregano's freaky uh i think it's a bad stinky present and it's like
i don't need you in my life ants all right so you both got two points because you got the the right
answer on the first one and also the the right answer for what the actual relationship was
and the second one sari gets nothing because Carvacrol
is one of the molecules responsible for
oregano's delightful smell. It's also a
chemical that kills ants,
kills them, and other pants.
Pants? Pests?
Oregano is really freaky.
It kills those pants.
It's a pant murderer.
Other plants, pests that might destroy the oregano's roots.
But myrmica ants actually have genes that help them avoid death.
However, that means that the little oregano plant, which has another weapon in the fight against ants that might eat them up, it has the large blue butterfly.
Large blue butterflies are one of a number of butterfly species called myrmecophiles that like to eat ants.
What?
What the hell?
Butterflies eating ants out here.
I never heard that before.
They are social parasites.
Their caterpillars produce a scent
that tricks ants into thinking
that the caterpillar is one of them.
To the caterpillar,
the hosts of its new home
double as an ant buffet,
and they spend around 11 months
just eating ant grubs.
The researchers trying to figure out how large blue moths find myrmeca have found that the butterflies home double as an ant buffet and they spend around 11 months just eating ant grubs the researcher is
trying to figure out how large blue uh moths find myrmica have found that the butterflies are drawn
to the carvacrol the oregano plant produces which points them to where the uh myrmica nests might be
so the whole thing is like a symbiotic three-ring circus with the oregano plant recruiting the large
blue butterfly as a shield to fight off the ants an additional fun thing here long before uh butterflies and ants had a mutualistic
relationship when caterpillars fed on plants and secreted sugars for the ants to eat in exchange
for protection in the nest but at some point the butterflies decided to become less generous
in their dealings with the ants what a a complicated history. Symbiosis can turn up, turn around and come back to literally bite you to death.
Wow.
I'm going to give Sam two points for that one.
It was stinky.
I was right.
All right.
Final round, everybody.
On the ocean floor is a crustacean called Randall's pistol shrimp.
It's around 1.2 inches long, and it doesn't see very well.
Ducking in and out of that pistol shrimp's burrow is a fish called Randall's prawn goby.
They're both?
Randall found both of them?
Yeah.
I guess that makes sense.
Yeah, they were together the day that Randall showed up.
So are these two friends sharing a burrow, or are they two foes battling with a common space?
Oh, I wouldn't think anybody named Randall's anything could be enemies.
Randall's such a nice name.
Randall would stand for it if they were enemies.
There are no mean Randys.
Maybe Randall was like playing Zoo Tycoon like me when I was a child and just putting them together and being like, battle to the death.
So, could be mean.
I think they're friends.
I think they gotta be friends.
What do you think they do?
Oh, yeah.
Clean each other or something.
I don't know.
I think they're friends.
I'm pretty sure I know this one.
I think they're friends.
And I think the Gobi acts as like a seeing eye Gobi for the shrimp.
And so, the shrimp has a hole
that the goby can sit in and be nice and safe.
And then when danger comes
and the goby like taps the shrimp
and was like, Randall, Randall, come hide with me.
Randall and Randall.
Yeah.
So the pistol shrimp and the goby fish
have a very handy exchange going on.
The shrimp digs the burrow for the two of them.
And in doing so, it also sends up small invertebrates into the water that the goby eats.
And as the goby eats, the shrimp is able to eat some of the scraps that float around.
In exchange, the goby protects the shrimp by lending its eyes.
The shrimp has bad vision.
As I said, it will leave the burrow and it'll keep its antenna in contact with the fish's tail fin.
And if something dangerous happens, the Gobi will signal to the shrimp by flipping its fin.
Oh my God, they're married.
Randall, get back in our hole.
So Sam has come out of this with five points and Sari had four.
Next, we're going to take a short break and then it'll be time for the fact off Welcome back, everybody.
Get ready for the fact off.
Our panelists have all brought science facts to present in an attempt to blow my mind.
After they have presented their facts, I will judge them and award Hank Bucks any way I see fit.
But to decide who goes first, I have a trivia question.
We were just talking about how lichen are a symbiotic combination of fungi with either algae or bacteria.
It turns out.
You might see lichen growing like crusts on a surface, or when they are in their macro-lichen form, they can look like leafy bushes.
In 2014, scientists were studying a macro-lichen species found in Central and South America. They were surprised to find out from their genetic analysis of this lichen that what they thought was one species of lichen
was actually more than one species.
At least how many distinct species did they realize
had been included under the name Dictonema glabatrum?
Glabratum.
I'm going to say 20.
All right. I was going to say 700, and I'm going to say 20. All right.
I was going to say 700 and I'm going to stick with it.
You're going to say 700?
Yeah.
Well, the answer is 126, which is way more than I thought.
Yeah, that's more than I thought too.
But not closer to 720.
That's true. Those scientists blew it out their asses huh sometimes it all just looks the same it's like you look the same you
and then you start centrifuging it and you're like oh yeah but who knows how many there are
out there that they haven't sequenced yet who know like they didn't collect every little every
little like it out there.
Yeah.
So maybe you're right,
Sam,
but at the moment,
Sarah is going to decide who goes first.
I'll go first.
So the mutualism between fig trees and some wasps is a classic.
I'm going to try to gross you out with science bit of knowledge,
but it's genuinely really cool how these two organisms rely on each other.
The figs on fig trees are anatomically a bloated stem that has a bunch of tiny flowers inside,
which feels kind of backwards because most plants have outside flowers,
so pollinators can easily reach them or the wind can carry pollen or something like that.
What?
The flowers are inside of the plant?
Yeah.
They're inside of the stem of the plant.
Yeah.
So it's really just like you turned a flower inside out and squished it in.
Yeah, it's gross.
I don't like it.
It's weird.
But evolutionarily, fig trees are doing just fine because they're pollinated by tiny wasps.
And here's how it works, just to lay the groundwork.
Big wasp eggs hatch inside a lumpy growth called a gall within a pollinated fig,
letting out male and female wasps who have their meat cute inside the only home they've ever known.
They mate, the males die, and then the fertilized females burrow out and fly to an immature fig.
There they burrow inside, lay eggs and various flowers, which will become galls, and die.
Their life cycle is complete and a new generation is seeded.
As an aside to debunk the
eugross reaction, when you eat a fig, you're not crunching into wasp grubs or exoskeletons,
just seeds. The fig plant produces enzymes that leak out from damaged tissues, like where wasps
pour into the fig, and that dissolves any insect chunks into macromolecules that are reabsorbed
and used. So it's not any grosser than eating a chicken and like you're eating the corn that the chicken ate.
And besides a lot of commercial figs nowadays
are artificially fertilized and ripened, which I learned.
Fig trees and wasps are linked symbiotically by reproduction.
Pollination doesn't happen the same way every time.
Some species of fig tree put energy into lots of male flowers
that make lots of pollen so that the female wasps
inevitably get coated in pollen in their home fig and just happen to fertilize the female flowers
inside their egg laying fig as they run around. This is called passive pollination. But other
species require the wasps to put in some more legwork. The male flowers are fairly small and
sparse, so the female wasps have to search for them inside their home fig,
gather up pollen, store it in little pockets in their thorax, and then when they venture out to
find an egg-laying fig, they have to take pollen out of their pockets and sprinkle them on the
female flowers in addition to laying eggs. This is called active pollination and is clearly more
work for the wasp. And a big question in mutualistic relationships is what keeps them
balanced? What's preventing one species
from acting selfish so like in the case of active pollination what if female wasps just didn't put
in the effort to collect and deposit pollen and laid their eggs anyway well it turns out big trees
are savage and have a black have a backup plan for that in a 2010 study researchers studied six
big wasp big tree mutualisms, four involving active
pollination and two involving passive pollination. And they found that when active pollinator wasps
tried to lay eggs without distributing pollen, the tree just got rid of the fig. Like, no,
you didn't hold up your end of the bargain. And it drops those immature figs to the ground and
kills all the baby wasp eggs inside. Or if the trees just happened to hang on to the
unpollinated but egg-filled figs they digested more of the babies so relatively fewer of them
were born you didn't do the thing wasp so i ate your children yeah a vengeful tree how does it
know that's what i i must have something to do with the pollination, but I couldn't find more information about
the biological mechanism of fig dropping.
I bet no one knows yet.
Or behavioral genes involved in active wasp pollinating.
So those are open questions.
But the moral of the story is don't try to cheat a fig tree when you've had an 80 million-year-old
relationship.
They'll know and have evolved a way to get back at you by killing your babies.
That's wild.
That is definitely the moral of the story. I mean, obviously I knew about figs and wasps,
but boy, that's a great twist. I don't know, Sam. That's a really good twist. I don't have
any questions. I'm like, I've pictured the tick tock I could make out of this already.
Christ.
Sight, smell, taste, touch, hearing the classic five senses possessed by many people and many animals.
But hey, why stop there?
In a semi-recent episode of SciShow, we tallied up a potential 33 senses that humans have, including proprioception and balance, just to name a few. But there is one sense that humans ain't got that
at least some animals have, and that is magnetoreception, which is the ability to detect
Earth's magnetic fields in a way that gives animals that can do it basically like an internal compass.
Since humans don't have this sense and animals can't talk, it seems like it's probably sort of
hard to prove that magnetoreception is even a thing. But in the 70s, studies of migratory birds
interacting with magnetic fields suggested that magnetoreception did even a thing. But in the 70s, studies of migratory birds interacting with magnetic fields
suggested that magnetoreception
did indeed exist.
But what the studies didn't do
was give much insight
into how the sense works.
And there have been a lot of studies
over the years
looking at various species
with magnetoreception.
There are a lot of promising theories
like birds have a protein in their eyes
that seems to respond to magnetic fields.
Some fish have the good old
ampule of Lorenzini.
Is that what it's called?
Yeah, one of those.
Something like that.
Love that thing.
It's an electroreceptive organ that might also detect magnetic fields.
But there are a lot of other guys like sea turtles and bats and whales that have magnetoreception,
but they don't have any identifiable organ or structure or proteins or anything like that
that seems to be helping them sense magnetic fields. Magic. It's magic. That's the end of it. This is the episode where I reveal
magic is real. But in 2020, some researchers from the University of Central Florida proposed a
pretty interesting, pretty episode theme appropriate theory to explain how these animals
might possess the sense. So not just big, complicated animals have magnetoreception.
There's a whole group of bacteria called magnetotactic bacteria
that also respond to magnetic fields.
And since bacterias are made of only like nothing,
and we can see right through them,
it's way easier to tell how they do it.
So basically, these guys have a crystal of magnetite in them,
and the crystals are, as the name implies, magnetic.
So the bacteria aren't really like as the name implies, magnetic. So the bacteria
aren't really like sensing the magnetic field and responding. They're just kind of being like
moved around by magnetic fields by the rocks in their guts. So these researchers thought to
themselves, hey, where do bacteria like to live? And the answer was inside animals. And maybe these
magnet containing guys are in those animals. So they took a look at a huge database of microbe genetic information.
And by golly,
they found a variety of magnetotactic bacteria in samples from turtles to
penguins, to bats, to whales.
But the problem is these are just like tissue samples.
So they don't actually know where in the animals,
those microbes are like where they live or how the animals might be able to
sense the
bacteria's alignment but they're looking into it and if they find that they're hanging out in
nervous tissues or brains or eyeballs the researchers think that there's a possibility
that in exchange for room and board magnetotactic bacteria are imparting their magnetic wisdom into
all kinds of animals or it's all just a big coincidence and that's just how science works
that's awesome that's awesome i want to know if i have them i don't know what if i have i looked into this a little bit and
there's some people it's like people who claim that they can sense magnetic fields are generally
like laughed out of scientific communities but i don't know yeah there's been a couple of
iffy studies that show effect like if you had like get people confused and then you ask them to point in the
direction of the place where they came,
they are more likely to have know it in certain circumstances where you don't
like scramble their magnet,
internal magnet.
But I think the studies are very old and we're not repeated.
We're repeatable.
Well,
you got to start drinking big old vials of magnetotactic
bacteria why not why not try it yeah because here's the thing like a lot of our senses we sense them
but like we don't know that we sense them so there was a lot of subconscious sensing going on and i
don't know maybe that's how it is for these animals like do they think ah i feel the constant tug of
north or do they just like, ah, that feels right.
All right, all right, all right, all right, all right.
I think that just do, same if they'd figured it out for sure.
Yeah.
I think you would have had a better chance.
I was more careful about saying that maybe in this time, you know?
Yeah, good job.
It's a good maybe.
And I'm excited for future research.
And I do want to reward scientists for doing that early work.
But trees murder baby wasps.
Yeah, that's pretty good.
Because the wasps weren't good enough to them.
So congratulations, Sari.
And congratulations on your win.
And now it's time to ask the science couch.
We got listener questions for our couch of finely honed scientific minds.
It's from at Andrew T.
Her who asks, what is the maximum amount of species that partake in a single symbiotic
relationship?
Well, as we were saying at the top of the episode, I guess it gets pretty complicated
and that every organism on Earth is kind of in a symbiotic relationship with a majority of the other organisms on Earth.
Okay.
But what do you think, Sari?
That was my vague feeling.
Yeah, that's where I was like, it starts to blur at some point.
And it seems like right now with our current scientific understanding, three is a pretty, we like threes anyway, like throughout sociology and history and whatever.
We like three for symbiosis as well, where it's like Sam talked about in a previous episode, like a virus inside a fungus in the roots of panic grass and yellowstone to help it survive extreme heat or
um lichen being three actually which is like a fungus a yeast and an algae or like a sloth
and a moth and the algae on its back or the moss on its back man the sloth and the moth and the algae on its back is definitely
a children's book doesn't it yeah it'd be a really good children it has poop in it too because the
sloth like climbs down the tree to poop and then the moth moth larvae grow in the poop and then
they like crawl into the fur where they sounds a little bummed out now. Well, I think it's kind of cute, but also really disgusting.
It's a little, it's very gross.
They're dirty.
Don't hug a sloth.
They're grimy and moist.
So, yeah, there's a lot of threes out there,
three-tier endosymbionts,
where it's like a thing inside a thing
inside another thing, kind of like a turducken.
There are situations with hyperparasites, where it's like specifically a parasitic symbiotic relationship, where there's something that paras five hyper parasites where they i think one of them parasites the tree and
then one of them like parasitizes another parasite and it's like stealing nutrients from them and
then they like human centipede it yeah but yeah that's i was i was thinking those exact two words
and i did decided not to say them out loud i they just came out of my mouth you know unfiltered so yeah so i don't know
we kind of answered this in our in our chatter in the definition but but yeah it's complex it's
complicated the maximum amount is kind of defined by when is it when does it stop being useful to
define it as a symbiotic relationship right when is it not useful anymore yeah and it is also defined by how recently and how many psychedelics you've taken
you start to sort of see it's all it's all in one big mutualism fifth dimension yeah then you can
see we're all connected i'm sorry has anybody ever had a turducken is that a real thing that
yeah i have oh i don't know i've only seen it on youtube
it's not just a useful metaphor it's a real thing oh yeah my mom made a turducken one thanksgiving
i wrote a song about it do you want to hear it yeah yeah it went like this i don't like
eating turducken turducken's not very good but i keep on eating turducken just cause turducken's food.
I was just like my sort of whole Thanksgiving was singing that song and like having the leftover
cold turducken over and over again. So if you, if you want to ask the science couch a question,
you can follow us on Twitter at SciShow Tangents, where we'll tweet out the topics for upcoming
episodes every week, or you can join the SciShowTangents Patreon
and ask us on our Discord.
Thank you to at Michaela Noel,
at Sir Wonko the Sane,
and everybody else who asked us
your questions for this episode.
Sir Wonko the Sane.
It's a fun one, yeah.
It is.
If you like this show and you want to help us out,
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Thank you for joining us. I've been
Hank Green. I've been Sari Reilly.
And I've been Sam Schultz.
SciShowTangents is created by all of us and produced by Sam Schultz
who edits a lot of these episodes along with Seth
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Thank you.
And remember, the mind is not a vessel to be filled, but a fire to be lighted.
But one more thing.
There's a little crab called Echinicus pentagonus that lives off the coast of Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean. But you won't find them scuttling around in the sand.
Instead, they're parasites to the sea urchin Echinothrix calamaris.
Baby crabs will hang around the sea urchin's mouth which is on the
bottom or anus which is on the top eating epithelial tissue around the opening and as the
female crabs mature they climb inside the sea urchin's rectum eating intestinal cells and fecal
pellets while enjoying lots of protection for the rest of their lives in fact they grow big enough
that they can't enter or exit the butthole without causing serious damage to the sea urchin host.
No!
Little terrible butt munchers.
You've discovered the terrible butt munching crab, and you name it Echinicus pentagonus, because apparently there's some kind of five-sided something going on.
But you don't...
You had so much opportunity to just scour Latin
for a terrible butt muncher instead.
You could get like Terabilis patat commendentii.
And that's the terrible butt muncher.
That's terrible butt eater.
Beautiful.
Well, scientists, we got to rename this one.
Sorry.