Date: March 6, 2019
Source: University of Maryland
An
international group of researchers including biologists from the University of
Maryland found that at least four species of marine ribbon worms independently
evolved the ability to regrow a head after amputation.
Regeneration
of amputated body parts is uncommon but does exist throughout the animal world
-- from salamanders, spiders and sea stars that can regrow appendages to a
species of ribbon worm that can regenerate an entire individual from just a
small sliver of tissue. But regenerative abilities were broadly assumed to be
an ancient trait that some species managed to hold on to while most others lost
through evolution.
This new
study, which was published in the March 6, 2019 issue of Proceedings of
the Royal Society B, turns that assumption on its head. In a survey of 35
species of marine ribbon worms, the researchers found that the ability to
regenerate an entire head, including a brain, evolved relatively recently in
four different species.
"This
means that when we compare animal groups we cannot assume that similarities in
their ability to regenerate are old and reflect shared ancestry," said
Alexandra Bely, associate professor of biology at UMD and one of the study's
authors. "We need to be more careful when comparing regeneration findings
across different groups of animals."
All
animals have some degree of regenerative ability. Even humans re-grow damaged
skin over a wound. However, animal lineages that diverged very early in
evolutionary history -- such as sponges, hydroids and ctenophores -- are often
able to regrow entire individuals from even small amputated parts. As animals
evolved greater complexity, regenerative abilities have become less dramatic
and common.
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