Stuff You Should Know - Naked Mole Rats: A Face Only a Mother Could Love
Episode Date: October 26, 2023Naked mole rats are funny looking to be sure, but neither moles nor rats. So what are they? You'll have to tune in to find out.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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["I Heart Radio"]
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too,
and this is Stuff You Should Know,
part of our ongoing, amazing animals edition.
Maybe the most robust, rhinoceros-like suite No, part of our ongoing, amazing animals edition.
Maybe the most robust rhinoceros like sweet of all of our sweets.
Probably, that are crime and punishment.
Sure, sure.
But I think everybody can get behind sloths and elephants,
and not everybody's like, sure, prison.
Right, or crime scene cleanup.
Sure, well that was a tough one.
But today we're adding to the animal one
and we're adding a good one check.
This is a great pick because thank you.
We're talking about naked mole rats
and they're one of those things like narwhals
where you're like, I've heard of it,
I know everybody's into them and everything. But like narwhals, where you're like, I've heard of it, I know everybody's into them and everything.
But unlike narwhals, when you do a little investigating
into them, Nika Morretts are ridiculously interesting.
They are.
And I think I mentioned this on an episode,
but where I got this idea, it was long simmering
because the great Errol Mor's documentary, Fast Cheap
and Out of Control, which have you seen it?
No.
It's a great documentary.
It's been around for a long time, and in that documentary, he takes, I think, three
disparate professions, gentlemen who perform these professions, and also ties it into an
old lion tamer guy from
a circus with like footage and telling his story. There's like a robot scientist, a topiary
gardener, the aforementioned lion tamer from footage, and then this guy who is a naked
mole rat scientist.
Oh yeah, what's his name? I don't remember his name. I can picture his face
and looking at, you know, when that documentary was, it was pretty early on and kind of what we
knew about naked mole rats. He was probably on the leading edge, but that's what...
On the leading edge? No, not the leading edge. That's when I first sort of discovered the naked
mole rat and fell in love with what might be the ugliest animal on
earth. For real. Yeah, it's also somewhere that National Geographic described them as bratwurst
with teeth. Oh man. And apparently the guy who first described them Edward Ruppell back in 1842
when he described them other biologists were like, well, clearly Ruppell back in 1842 when he described them other biologists were like well clearly
Ruppell your dumb because this has got to be a baby of some sort of some other species or
these things are diseased they're not their own thing and he said no really I think they're
their own thing and he turned out to be right but that just goes to show just how
weird looking they are that even biologists were like, what is this thing?
Yeah.
Any naked animal, and they're a handful, is strange looking to people that are accustomed
to mammals with fur.
Yeah.
I should say mammals.
But the naked mole rat is, I mean, boy, this thing is like only a mother could love is the saying, I think, a face and body.
For sure.
They all have the same mother pretty much.
Oh, no. Look at you.
Yeah, we'll get into that later.
But drop in it.
Let's talk a little bit about the taxonomic classification of naked mole rat, shall we?
Yeah.
Take it away. Because they used to be classified differently,
but they finally settled on giving them
their own little space now, right?
I don't know that they settled on it.
I think it's proposed and not everybody
in the naked mole rat research community agrees on it,
but they are rodents, they're in the order of Odentia,
they're in the family bathier, bathier Gide.
I even practiced that.
That's so frustrating to have practiced it.
It's a foul.
Out loud and still miffed it.
No, I think you got it, bathier gide.
Yeah, I got it the second time, but it should have rolled off my tongue for as much as
I practiced it.
That never does.
So, all of the family bathier gide are located in Sub-Saharan Africa. And there's a bunch of
different kinds of mole rats. It's just the naked mole rat is its own thing and it's so distinct
in so many different ways that like you were saying some naked mole rat scientists are like they're
we just need to make their own family because right now they're a separate genus.
They're their own genus, heterosuffel,
heterosuffel, Lee-Dae.
Practice that one too.
But they're so different from the other members
of the family that they're like,
we should not just classify them as their own genus
and species, we should classify them as their own family.
This one type of animal should be its own family.
Not everybody's on board. Yeah, type of animal should be its own family,
not everybody's on board.
Yeah, but I think everyone listening has a family member
that they think maybe should be classified
as their own family.
Always naked, buck teeth, that family member.
Rest, yeah.
Uncle Rusty.
Like you mentioned, the naked mole rats
live throughout the horn of Africa, generally in
Kenya, Ethiopia, and Somalia.
And they are doing great.
There are a lot of them.
This isn't one of those.
I feel like most of the animals we cover have some sort of threatened designation, but
they're killing it and they're doing awesome.
There's lots of them.
One reason why is because the land that they live under is so arid that it's not usually
disturbed for crop land. So they don't get into fights with farmers typically, which would be a
big problem for them because they would eat all the farmers crops and the farmers would kill them all.
So because they don't really dwell where humans tend to dwell, that's a big mark in their
favor from what I saw. Totally. I mean, hopefully you've looked up a picture, like pulled off to
the side of the road or something if you're driving to see a picture of these things. So you have an
idea of what we're talking about, if not do so, because you might think they look like maybe a
newborn guinea pig or something? Maybe.
I mean, that's being kind, I guess.
And that's the adults.
Or, yeah, exactly.
But they did diverge from guinea pigs,
they believe about 50 million years ago.
So they're related in a way,
but like you said, they really are their own thing.
Yeah, and they're pretty much not related to moles or rats.
It's their closest relative is gu to skinny pigs like you said. And one of the things that really makes
naked mole rats special is that they are phosphorial, which is a type of animal that lives underground
pretty much all the time. They don't live underground when it's hot out and then come out at night
to feed or hunt. They live underground. I'm sure plenty of them spend their entire lives
underground. And their lives are significant in length, as we'll see. But that's a big
distinction because there's a lot of animals that live underground, but spend time above
ground too, not naked mole rats.
No, they love it down there. And as we've covered in what was the biospealiology
episode, I think?
Yeah.
And we also, didn't we also do one
on other cave dwelling animals?
Or was that that one?
I think it was that one.
All right, either one or two of those,
but we, you know, they have some features
that other animals who live generally deep underground
for a lot of their lives have,
which is not really useless eyes.
I mean, they have, technically they have eyes,
they can sense bright and dark,
but they're basically blind,
and they don't have ears really either.
They have little tiny ear flaps,
if they have anything at all.
They're about three to four inches long, except for the
queen who can be a bit bigger. Talk about the queen because it's very, very interesting.
And then they have a little short tail, sort of a tapered tail, and then a little piggy
snout. But what's really like when you look at a naked mole rat, the first thing you're
going to notice is they're naked and really
wrinkly and funny looking.
And then those chompers up front.
Yeah, because their teeth, if you look closely, they come out of their face, not their mouth.
They can close their mouth.
Which is still at their teeth out.
Yeah, it's pretty cool.
It's an adaptation that they came up with where they can use their teeth to dig while their mouth
is close to they keep dirt from getting in their mouths.
Yeah, it's amazing.
And you dug up some extra stuff which is pretty remarkable about those teeth.
And we're going to talk a little bit about the teeth, probably a lot about the teeth.
But they basically function as a sense organ.
Scientists have found that the Somo, man, I practice that one too,
somaticence-recortex, that's not even a hard one.
Which is involved in the sense of touch
is very, very large, and about a third of it
is dedicated to those insiders,
so they actually feel through those teeth.
Yeah, like you said, it's a sense organ,
that's really cool.
They also use them not only to sense the world,
but also to carry stuff around.
They can use them like needle-nose pliers.
They can move them independently in all sorts of different weird directions.
I don't know of any other animal that has teeth as a sense organ.
It's pretty cool.
No, how about those jaws, too?
So because their teeth are so important to them, not just for eating,
but for digging and creating their habitats and for defense too, their jaws, I think 25%
of their entire muscle mass of their body is in their jaws, specifically in the jaw muscle,
the deep masseter muscle. If you put three fingers upward on your cheek so that you're kind of making that scouts
on or thing, the finger closest to you is just touching your ear, the outside of your
ear, or where your touch is your face.
I'm doing it.
And then you start making a chewing sound, or chewing motion.
Do you feel how your cheek is pushing out
against your fingers beneath?
I do.
That's your masseter.
And then do one other thing.
Leave your fingers there.
Don't move.
No, all right.
But slide them up a little further to your temple
and then do the same thing.
Do you feel that muscle moving?
Yeah, that's the headache button.
Exactly.
That's your masseter muscle as well.
So we have them too, but only about 1% of our muscle mass
is invested in our jaws.
A quarter of their muscle mass is invested in their jaw,
and specifically in the masseter complex.
Yeah, it's amazing.
And that makes those teeth basically,
like, it's sort of like a shovel chisel combination.
They can shovel.
It is a shovel.
They have tremendous power.
Or a chisel.
To screw.
A snoop dog has that trait.
I think we get sued for that.
And we'll be like, hey, go after the naked mole rat snoop.
I saved those sideburns years ago. So they use them, you know, they're scraping,
they're always digging, they're always carrying dirt.
Like you mentioned, they can close their little lips
because they don't want to get dirt in their mouths.
And they're always just sort of at work.
Digging tunnels, they're like Charles Bronson
and the greatest gate.
Right, pretty much the two they've modeled
their entire society on.
Yeah, and they do this in a little, like an assembly line. Yeah. constant in the greatest state. Right, pretty much the two they've modeled their entire society on.
Yeah, and they do this in a little, like an assembly line,
they will nod into the earth and they will pass dirt back
and eventually that dirt forms what else?
A mole hill.
Yeah, I saw there was kind of like a conveyor belt.
So there's one naked mole rat at the front doing all the digging
and there's a bunch of mole rats following them
that are sweeping like a specific pile out.
And as they're sweeping it further and further back,
and as they're moving backward,
they finally get to the end.
And then there's a larger mole rat
that is kicking it outside,
forming that mole hill you were talking about.
And then when the mole rat,
that's been sweeping it to the guy who's kicking it out of the tunnel,
they climb back over the people in front of them and go to the front of the line again. So it is, it's like this conveyor about this just
tunneling, like boring through the earth. And this is really hard packed dry dirt, too. It's not easy stuff to chew through.
No, they make, they make easier work out of it when things are a little wetter, but generally this
dirt is fairly dry, like you said.
So it's pretty tough.
And we mentioned that they're a hairless.
They do have some tiny little hairs here and there.
They have some sensory hairs on their faces and tails and a little bit of hair between
their toes so they can sweep away that dirt, like you were talking about.
But if you look at a naked mole rat,
I mean, the first thing that you're gonna say
is that things naked and look at those teeth
and I imagine a large one would be terrifying.
Because they're pretty small, like we said,
just a few inches.
Yes.
Did you watch the Smithsonian naked mole rat cams?
No, but there's so much of that in fast-cheap
and out of control.
Okay. It's amazing. I had not fast-cheap and out of control. Okay.
It's amazing.
I had not seen them before and they are really cute.
They're so studious and so serious about the digging around and moving around that
they're doing.
They're pushing this thing over there and they're super cute when you watch them.
Apparently they're not very aggressive.
There's only specific instances where they show aggression, but for the most part they're not very aggressive. There's only specific instances where they show aggression,
but for the most part, they're pretty peaceful. Even though to us, they would seem pretty rude,
because they climb over one another, in part because they are very closely related. So, you know, they're fine with that.
But also because their habitats are enormous, but they still live on top of each other. Like a naked mole rat tunnel system
can be comprised of miles of tunnel
that spread out over like five acres of land.
And yet when they live together,
they live in a really tight, close knit community.
That they literally crawl on top of each other.
Yeah, they crawl all over each other like it's nothing like they're crawling over like a rock or something and they are just as good at going backwards as forwards. Yeah, when we say that like we mean it they've they've they've done little races and they found that naked more ads can go backwards just as fast as they can go forward and are just as coordinated,
which isn't super coordinated, but we're talking naked mole rats here that's in a smallish tunnel.
Well, I'm pretty stimulated Chuck, do you want to take a break? Yeah, let's take a break.
Since you're stimulated. I got a D-stem.
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You feeling good?
Yeah, but I'm going to get stimulated again, Chuck, because there's so much more...
We haven't even really tapped into the most amazing stuff about naked mole rats.
All of this is neat. This is interesting, but just wait everybody. Just you wait.
Should we talk about respiration? I think we should.
Well, here's the deal. They're underground in these very tight spaces. And down there,
because there are so many naked mole rats, I don't think we said, but they live in colonies
and we'll get to the social structure because it's very, very interesting among mammals for sure, and especially
among rodents. But, you know, 70 to 200 to 300 naked mole rats living together in these
tightish quarters, even though it's spread out, you know, they're small tunnels because they're
small animals. And there's not a lot of oxygen down there. They can get by on a startlingly
low amount of oxygen.
Yeah, in an environment that's also high in carbon dioxide, like you or I would suffocate
the death in a naked mole rat tunnel system.
I need an animal, what I think.
Yeah, pretty much. And the reason why is because they've become adapted to that kind of environment,
a low oxygen, high carbon dioxide environment, and the way that they've adapted is they have
evolved a system that aside from naked mole rats has only been found in plants.
That's right.
So oh, keep going.
So the fruit toast pump, we all have fruit toast pumps, but ours are all in our guts.
The naked mole rats have a fruit toast pump that uses a metabolic pathway that takes fruit
toast to be burned for energy in their brains.
And the reason fruit toast is so important is because it can be burned anaerobically.
You don't need oxygen to power that system of energy creation or unlocking
energy, I guess, from the fruit toast. You can just do it without oxygen. So they lower
their metabolism enough that they don't need much oxygen. They can get by on the burning
fruit toast until there's more oxygen available again.
Yeah, it can live in an atmosphere that is 20% oxygen and 80% CO2 and they've been
able to survive for at least five hours with as little as 5% oxygen, 5%. Yeah, you couldn't
do that. I think 20% is like the Andes, 5% is not much at all. No. So there's another thing
I said that they were generally peaceful. They're
generally peaceful within the colony. Apparently, there's a behavior that Queens have where
they show up and they'll just start shoving workers around. Did you see that? Yeah.
And they're not quite sure why. They can be aggressive at times. Yeah, but it's mostly
just the Queen and she's mostly shoving workers. They thought maybe it was because they were
being lazy,
but the worker is much more likely to be shoved
while they're working, which just seems obnoxious.
Maybe it's just a little reminder, you know?
Yeah, maybe.
But other than that, they aren't very aggressive,
unless you're a naked mole rat from another colony.
And from what I saw, if you stumble
into a naked mole at colony and you're
an outsider, they will kill you. Yeah, it's not pretty. If you're a predator as well,
they will band together and stack on one another and reveal those teeth if a centipede or
a snake or something comes down there. And yeah, and like you said, if you're not a member of the family,
and I guess we should go ahead and say it,
like they're all the same family, right?
Isn't there a lot of incest going on?
Yeah, let's talk about their incest, shall we?
Sure.
So they imbrede.
The reason why is because they have one queen
that's just part of their hierarchy, their social structure.
And the queen has a very limited number of people
to breed with.
She basically says, you, you, and you,
you're my breeding males.
Everybody else, not only don't breed with the queen,
somehow, mysteriously, the queen keeps worker males and worker females
from even maturing sexually.
Yes.
They have no idea how this is happening because if you take a nonbreeding worker male in
a nonbreeding worker female out of their colony, within days, they develop adult mature
reproductive systems and can reproduce.
Yeah, like something going on.
A male literally will, they have tiny kind of buried testicles, but five days after they're
out of that hole, those testicles literally grow.
Yeah, you should see that on fast motion.
It's really funny.
Please tell me that's not existing.
Oh, but there's a gift out there somewhere.
Okay.
I haven't seen it, though.
Yeah, but it's weird.
It's this suppression of reproducibility.
It's the queen.
It's just the queen and all the other males have their hands up.
And only if you get to go in there and take care of business.
Yeah, so very frequently,
her own offspring, that's just how it goes. For take care of business. Yeah, so very frequently, her own offspring,
that's just how it goes.
For a couple of reasons.
One, she makes so many, she has so many
litters over her lifetime.
And then also they are, they're very long lived.
I think in captivity, they live up to 30 years so far.
I saw it longer too.
I saw one that was like close to 40.
So we've only been studying them in captivity for about 40-ish years, maybe 50.
So we don't really know what their actual, like, the upper limit of their lifespan is.
We'll talk about that later.
But a mouse, if it's lucky, lives five years in captivity.
These guys are living 30, 40 years, right? That's old.
Yeah, I saw the Queen's not in captivity. It's usually like 18 to 20 years.
Okay. So underground, which is still remarkable. Yeah, that's super remarkable. So during that time,
because she's creating so many letters and there's outsiders who come to the colony get killed. She has to, it's inevitable.
She's reproducing with her own kin.
And so they've found genetically chucked
that the average genetic similarity
between just any two members of a colony is about 0.5.
In human terms, 0.5 is what a parent
in their offspring has. These are just
brothers and sisters have point five similarity. I think between the queen and her offspring,
it's like point eight. And you're like, what is all this getting at? The highest number you can
get to is 1.0. And that's for identical twins that came from the same egg. They're almost genetically
identical twins that came from the same egg. They're almost genetically, perfectly identical,
and the queen and her offspring are like at 0.8.
So they are super, dooper, imbred.
Yeah, I mean, it's only them down there.
What happens underground, stays underground,
you know what I'm saying?
I guess so.
The other cool thing, or another cool thing
about them living underground is that they're
basically cold-blooded.
I think scientifically, technically, they're probably not, but effectively they are cold-blooded
mammals because they don't have self-regulating body temperature.
They regulate their body temperature in a few ways, but they basically call it behavioral
regulation, thermoregulation. They will work harder sometimes to get their, you know, to get the heat going.
They will stack themselves on one another when it's colder, and they will go higher in the tunnel
system closer to the surface to feel that sun's heat, but still not go outside to warm up.
When it's colder, they will, I'm sorry, when it's warmer,
they will go deeper and have more space in between them
and stuff like that.
And yet, despite all that, despite not being able
to regulate their own temperature,
they still maintain about in the 80s Fahrenheit.
That's how warm it is in a naked mole rat tunnel system.
And the humidity's like 50 to 60%.
It's balmy.
It's balmy, it's warm, and it's not balmy
because it's full of water because get this.
I know you know this.
I'm talking to the people in podcast lately.
I know.
They don't drink water.
They don't say like, they try to seal off those tunnels.
It's not probably not possible to completely seal them off,
but they would flood very easily if they didn't do as good a job as they do already.
But it's not like they dig little water wells and let them fill up and go lap it up, you know, through those teeth.
They don't drink water, they get water from what they eat.
We said they didn't go out to find food and stuff, so you're wondering what are they eating
like little insects who stumble in there?
No.
No, they are eating roots and bulbs and rhizomes
and tubers, basically what part of the plant is underground.
They're eating that stuff,
and that's also where they're getting
every bit of water they need.
Yeah, it's pretty awesome.
Again, they live in the desert. and that's also where they're getting every bit of water they need. Yeah, it's pretty awesome.
Again, they live in the desert.
So this is where desert plants store their waters in big tubers and bulbs.
And typically, when a naked mole rat goes out and stumbles into a tuber,
they'll start bringing it back to the rest of the colony.
They're very, very good like that.
They really look out for one another.
But once in a while, they'll find a tuber
that's like 50 pounds.
That's just huge and they're no naked.
More I could do anything with that.
So they eat it in situ and they do it in such a way
that they'll bore a hole into this giant tuber,
eat the inside flesh and then come back out
and they'll plug the hole with dirt and then they'll let the whole with dirt, and then they'll let the tuber regenerate, let the plant like regrow,
and then they'll go back and do it again
once the plant's healthy again.
And that needs...
It's amazing.
They're not doing this in any kind of,
I don't think we mentioned, like,
their sleep cycles.
They work together,
like very, very well,
and we'll talk about that structure more in a minute,. They're not, they work together like very, very well
and we'll talk about that structure more in a minute,
but it's not like they get up in the morning,
they don't know what morning is, they're underground.
So as far as anyone can tell,
they don't have any kind of regular sleep cycle going on.
They just, they work when they're supposed to work
and they work till they get tired and then they sleep.
Yeah, there's no morning underground.
Isn't that grim?
Yeah, but that's a song title of some sort of death metal band
probably.
I think you could make it the titular song title for the album.
The naked mole rats.
Sure.
That's the name of the man.
I guess no, I mean like there is no morning underground is the name of the man. I guess no. I mean like there is no morning underground
is the name of the first single and the album. Yeah, and the album. And then in parentheses,
it says like believe me or something like that. Sure.
Uh, or can we talk, I mean, we talked about what they eat, but we should also talk about
the other thing they sometimes eat. I'm kind of excited about this. Take it away then.
They eat poop.
They eat their own poop.
They eat their own poop.
They eat others poop.
Apparently the adults of the colony will poop directly
into the mouths of the pups when they need it,
when they want it.
And this all sounds gross and it is.
I think even other types of mole rats are like,
good, God, have you seen what our cousins do
and we're not around?
But there's a good reason for this.
This is actually a big strategy.
They have a gut to digest these really hard tubers.
This is not the kind of like root vegetables
you would get at a grocery store.
This is wild, sub-Saharan Africa tubers
that they're eating and trying to digest.
And they can't possibly digest it all the first time.
So when they poop, it's still chock full of food
so they don't waste it.
They just eat the poop.
That's right.
And they have a hind gut, because herbivores often have
things inside their body that are gonna help them
digest this really virus plant matter.
And they do have a hind gut that is really good for that,
but it's still not good enough.
And so like you said, they eat it again,
and that pretty much takes care of it.
There's one other really cool thing about it too.
Well, there's two other cool things about eating poop one,
when the adults poop into the pup's mouths,
they're not just feeding them.
They're also transferring gut microbiota,
which will help them protect them from disease, will help them digest stuff even better.
It's pretty neat.
And then they also think we talked about suppressing the reproductive dis of the other females,
the queen can somehow repress them. They don't know how she's doing that
But they do think that the reason why other non-worker females
Help raise pups with no incentive whatsoever and with no reproductive organs or hormones
Is that when they eat the queen's poop she passes just enough estrogen to them to make them want to take care of the pups.
That is astounding.
It is.
And there's one more part to the poop.
We mentioned if you come in and you're from another colony, you're in big trouble.
They also think that feeding the poop and also occasionally rolling in the poop is a way
that they can impart a colony smell smell that everyone's gonna have.
Yeah, so everybody will smell the same.
So if somebody shows up, you're like,
you're not Terry and then they're dead.
Right, because they can tell from your smell
because their sense of smell is just ridiculously acute.
That's basically what they have smell touch
and then hearing somehow
because they make more vocalizations
than any other rodent on the planet
and yet they basically don't
have ears.
So I'm not sure how they do that.
Yeah, I mean, we can talk about that a little bit.
They have, the queen has a toilet song when she goes poo-poo in her toilet chamber.
And I guess we should also say that they have different chambers for different things.
They have bathrooms and they have bedrooms. They have these sort of expressway
superhighways that are a little larger where they're just crawling all over each other back and forth.
But they have different rooms and one of them is a bathroom and she sings a little toilet song when
she goes. And they think that might be like, hey, I just pooped. Does anyone going to come in here
and eat this? Or am I going gonna have to throw it at you?
She also says, hey you three that I picked out earlier. I'm ready to have intercourse with you. So here
here's my song for that. We mentioned those predators. There are sounds for predator invasions. And then
you know, and this might lead us into talking about the social structure, maybe after a break.
Yeah.
But they do have little chirps that will signal their social order, which is still not
quite figured out.
But maybe we'll take a break there and talk about that.
Let's do it.
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Listen to you and me both on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. So we mentioned early on that they are a part of the Bathy Urgid.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Alright.
Bathy Urgid group, and they are generally pretty solitary.
They may live with a few others here and there,
but they don't do what naked mole rats do,
which is colonies that can get up into the hundreds.
The closest thing that you compare a naked mole rat to
is like an ant colony.
Yeah, or bees.
Like you find you sociality,
they're you social, I think you said before. You you find usosiality, they're usosial,
I think you said before.
You find that in the insect world, not in the mammal world.
Apparently there's only one kind of mole rat
that has usosial hierarchy,
but there's even, like it's just nothing
compared to the rigidity of the naked mole rats.
Yeah, so usosial means it is, like you said, it is rigid, it is very defined, but they
don't fully understand that structure.
In full, they have some little clues.
I think some of the males vary in size a little bit, and I think they think that the ones
that are a little bigger may be higher up on the, you know, social structure.
They, most of them are workers, but some of them, it seems, are specifically soldiers that
kind of are on the front lines when that scorpion comes down.
Yeah, they have a division of labor.
What else?
Well, I've got, so the fact that they're usosial is not intuitive because no one knew that there
were such a thing as mammals
that were U-social.
And I found out that they've only known that these things were U-social for since like the
80s or 90s.
And the way that they found out was really astounding because some of these early naked mole rat
researchers were like, where are, why aren't these mole rats pregnant?
Like I have not seen a pregnant female,
because they didn't know that it's just the queen
that's creating the litters, right?
And there was a biologist named Richard Alexander
who described a hypothetical U-social mammal species.
And somebody who was a researcher named Jennifer Jarvis
who was a naked mole rat researcher
was like, buddy, you just described
naked mole rats, and I think you just solved this puzzle, this mystery, that they're actually
a you social mammal species, and that's how we figured it out, just totally by chance.
Yeah.
And, you know, we mentioned the queen a few times.
The queen is obviously at the top of that you social structure, and much like bees that
we've talked about a lot, that queen runs the show.
There is almost always only one queen.
I think in rare cases there could be a couple of queens, but when it's time for a new queen
to take the crown, there is a big fight.
The females sometimes will kill each other to become queen. Oh, yeah. But it's a violent affair to become queen.
And they think that this is one of the reasons,
one of the few reasons why the queen ends up larger
is because you may start out a little larger
if you're the one defeating the other females.
And then this is another remarkable naked mole rat fact.
Once you become queen, your body literally gets longer.
Your spine lengthens.
Yeah, like I saw a picture, I think Ed added it in this article, the knee of like the first
litter queen, you know, five litter queen, ten litter queen.
And that like, I think the ten litter queen, her spine is about at least one and a half times
the length of what it would have been during her first letter. That's how significantly
their body changes so that they can have larger and larger letters over time.
Yeah, it's remarkable. And how many, so they can have up to like 10 litters total throughout their life?
I think it can get even even larger than that I've seen and I think that the number of pups in a litter the record is 27
Oh wow yeah, so they're having a lot and they can have tons of litters over their lifetime and then
As many as you know 27 and a single litter, they're really reproducing.
There's a lot of pressure on them to produce.
You know what I mean?
Oh, totally.
We mentioned that they almost never, never go outside
of the cave system and the tunnel system.
The very few times that they've seen it happen
is like, they call it like a mini migration where
they will see one maybe try to go to a different colony.
I don't know if they figured out why they would leave their colony, but periodically that will happen,
and they will travel at night, of course, because if they went out in the sun in the desert during the
day, they would probably fry like little sausages with teeth, like you said.
For sure. Br bratwurst.
So they also think that one of the main reasons
that they would ever leave the colony and go up top
is to form a new colony, kind of like a peaceful,
I guess a peaceful coup, a bloodless coup
that actually leaves the existing queen in place.
Cause you know, bees do that.
When they swarm, that's a bunch of bees in a colony
that's gotten overcrowded, going and forming their own colony.
The apparently as you social mammals,
that's what Naked Moorats do as well sometimes.
Yeah, it's pretty interesting.
And I guess we should talk about the final remarkable fact about naked mole rats is that they don't age in the sense that we think about aging.
They get older on the calendar, but they have shown a remarkable lack of like their body and their organs and like their tissue and stuff like that,
showing signs of traditional aging.
Yeah, which is, I mean, they get up to 30,
like six times the average age of a mouse
or the far end age of a mouse,
and they're just not aging, no inflammation,
their bones don't deteriorate, they just are ageless,
and people, researchers who started to notice
this are like, what is going on? And they have kind of zeroed in on one particular molecule
called the hyaluronon. And you might be familiar with that.
Hyaluronic acid, which people love to put in like their facial moisturizers
and stuff like that because it's found in skin.
Well, it's also found in naked mole-retts skin and it's found in aces.
They have 10 times the amount that humans do and the molecules of higher luron that
they do have are like five times larger in size. Yeah, so they have more bigger,
higher loron molecules.
And they think that it's possible,
because they're very resistant to,
they found out that at first they were very resistant to tumors and cancer.
And so they're like, in the naked mole rat,
does the, is that the secret to curing cancer?
And I don't think that anyone is like saying that they're right around the corner from figuring
that out, but they have gotten this high allure on and they have put it in mice because
mice are very cancer prone, which is one reason we study mice when we study cancer.
But they have found that these mice do much better and they live longer and they
It's almost like an immediate shot of youth when they get this stuff
Yeah, when they transfer the high alert and on synthase 2 gene into mice
They really benefit from it and then on the cancer front
when they
When they suppress the tumor suppressing genes that are found in mammals in the naked mole rats,
they still don't get tumors.
But when they suppress the gene that expresses high
alert on, they start to get tumors.
So they've pretty much zeroed in on high alert on as some sort
of an anti-tumor agent, and it's a gooey sugar,
and they've shown that when you remove it from a petri dish of
Nikamore at cells the cells will goop together, but they won't stick together as long as there's hyaluron in there
Yeah, and it's in it's it's in there like you said they're connected tissue
So it's one of the reasons they have
That that loose kind of stretchy, we are looking skin, is because of this high luron on,
and we went over, we drove right by one of the facts
that you dug up, this pretty amazing,
is that in their body can move inside their skin
without their skin moving?
They can turn about halfway around
within their skin, it's that loose.
So like they could be doing that in front of your face and you would not know it
because their skin is just static.
Yeah, you'd be like, wow, why is there head over there all of a sudden?
Right.
There still seem to be facing forward.
Doesn't make any sense.
Yeah.
And that skin comes in handy when they're calling around those tunnels and
slipping by each other and stuff like that.
I mean, there are reasons why their skin is like that. And it's just remarkable, these old guys.
Yeah, and they think that the anti-aging, anti-tumor traits that they've developed over time
are just a byproduct of the actual adaptation, which is super loose skin that's created by
cells that aren't allowed to stick together.
Yeah, and they've also found out that they don't experience pain like other mammals do.
And you would of course, the first thing you think of is like pain is a good thing because
that tells you when you've got your hand on a hot stove or what have you. It's not the first thing I
think of. It's not. No, I think of. That's great.
I don't like pain.
Oh, sure.
But it's a, you know, we have to have pain so we know when we're experiencing something
that could kill us.
It's granted.
But they have just enough of a pain receptor to like keep them from dying stupidly, but
not enough to actually feel pain.
And I saw this one fact, I guess, from an experiment.
That means like somebody actually did this.
They said that their skin doesn't respond to pain
when you put acid or capsaicin,
like what they put in pepper, hot pepper stuff,
like in pepper spray, that's capsaicin.
And their skin doesn't react
when you put that stuff on their skin.
Yeah, or they don't, even if their skin's showing signs of burning, they're just like,
what?
I didn't hear you.
No, their skin literally doesn't respond to acid.
Oh, so the skin itself doesn't.
The skin itself doesn't.
Okay, but I get the impression also that if you like hurt one, I hate to even talk about
this, but if you hurt one, it wouldn't even notice it because it's pain threshold is so high.
And the reason they think that this is the case is because their metabolism is so fragile,
they're on such like a razor's edge that they think that their nervous system evolved
to, like you said, just give them enough pain signals to get by, but not enough to really
require a lot of extra energy.
They don't need that kind of sensation to survive.
Does that mean in some lab somewhere they draw straws to see who has to thump the naked
mole rat?
No, but yeah, I'll bet that's a bummer day for you at the office.
Would be for me.
I think that's all the amazing facts.
I'm looking over my notes. I don't think there's
anything else, is there? I don't think so. The only thing I would say is go to the Smithsonian
Nink and Molrat camps as soon as you can. They're very cute and to watch. Yeah. And watch
fast sheep and out of control. It's a great documentary because he somehow manages manages to, Errol Morris does, to tie each of these professions into a, into a,
a theme, a common theme. It's really interesting. The guy's good. And if you think
about it, it's robots that this guy's making that look like insects. It's plants
that a guy is shaping to look like animals. Wait, wait, are you spoiling it right now?
No. Okay.
These are just the jobs they have. Okay.
The naked mole rat guy,
I'm trying to figure out how that figured in that way.
I can't remember.
It's been a while.
But anyway, this guy's enthusiasm,
the scientists that they found is just very contagious.
How much he loves these naked mole rats.
I could see it.
I mean, you could do a lot worse to pin your career
to that animal, it's biologists,
like they are just coming up with some amazing stuff.
GREED.
So since I mentioned amazing stuff in Chuck said,
agreed, that means everybody's time for listening to mail.
That's right.
But I'm gonna shout out that naked mole rat guy.
His name is Ray Mendez.
And he's, he's pretty amazing.
Nice.
All right, so I'm gonna call this, let me see. I'm gonna open up the folder.
Oh boy.
You guys, you don't know if this means when Chuck opens up the folder, it gets real.
Oh boy, that's an old one. I'm gonna read that one. That might be out of date. Okay. I'll read. Oh, okay, this is fairly recent. Uh, Hoya. I remember we talked about the Georgetown Hoya's.
Mm-hmm.
And we're like, what the heck is a Hoya? We heard from a few Hoya's.
And this was from Mark Mayer, or Mark Meyer, excuse me.
Hey guys, first time writer, a long time listener, graduate of Georgetown U.
And, uh, I actually have some knowledge to give
back. Your answer to the question, what is a Hoya, is exactly. Let me explain. What I was taught
was that Georgetown's nickname came from the stone walls, named after the University's beautiful
walls, or the football team's defense, depending on who you ask.
The good Jesuits that we are, our cheer was the Latin translation of what rocks,
hoia, saksa.
And that was eventually shortened to hoia's.
The mascot change, but the nickname stuck.
So if a Georgetown student what a hoia is, the standard tongue-in-cheek response is something like correct or exactly.
What is a Hoya? Because the word Hoya literally translates to what?
What is Hoya? Is how I should have written it.
Now I understand why people don't like Georgetown graduates. I never knew, but now I do.
Mark says this is some 19th century who's on first type of fun.
Hope this helps.
Thanks for the quality entertainment
that has gotten me through countless mose,
drives, and runs.
I guess, mowing lawn.
Sure.
All right, that's for Mark Meyer.
Thanks a lot, Mark.
That was great knowledge you imparted.
Thank you very much.
I can't wait till somebody asks me what's a hoya
Can't wait to say exactly
And if you want to be like Mark and send us some info that we didn't know you can put it in an email and send it off
To stuff podcast at iHeartRadio.com
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