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No one can figure out how eels have sex - Lucy Cooke

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    From Ancient Greece to the 20th century,
    Aristotle, Sigmund Freud,
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    and numerous other scholars were all
    looking for the same thing: eel testicles.
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    Freshwater eels, or Anguilla Anguilla,
    could be found in rivers across Europe,
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    but no one had ever seen them mate.
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    And despite countless dissections,
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    no researcher could find eel eggs
    or identify their reproductive organs.
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    Devoid of data, naturalists proposed
    various eel origin stories.
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    Aristotle suggested that eels spontaneously
    emerged from mud.
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    Pliny the Elder argued eels rubbed
    themselves against rocks,
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    and the subsequent scrapings
    came to life.
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    Eels were said to hatch on rooftops,
    manifest from the gills of other fish,
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    and even emerge from the
    bodies of beetles.
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    But the true story of eel reproduction
    is even more difficult to imagine.
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    And to solve this slippery mystery,
    scholars
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    would have to rethink
    centuries of research.
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    Today, we know the freshwater eel
    lifecycle has five distinct stages:
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    larval leptocepheli, miniscule glass
    eels, adolescent elvers,
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    older yellow eels, and adult silver eels.
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    Given the radical physical differences
    between these phases,
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    you’d be forgiven for assuming these
    are different animals.
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    In fact, that’s exactly what European
    naturalists thought.
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    Researchers were aware of leptocepheli
    and glass eels,
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    but no one guessed they were related
    to the elvers and yellow eels
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    living hundreds of kilometers upstream.
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    Confusing matters more, eels don’t
    develop sex organs until late in life.
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    And the entirety of their time in the
    rivers of Europe
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    is essentially eel adolescence.
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    So when do eels reproduce,
    and where do they do it?
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    Despite its name, the life of a freshwater
    eel actually begins
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    in the salty waters of
    the Bermuda Triangle.
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    At the height of the annual cyclone
    season,
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    thousands of three-millimeter eel larvae
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    drift out of the Sargasso Sea.
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    From here, they follow migration
    paths to North America and Europe––
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    continents that were much
    closer when eels
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    established these routes
    40 million years ago.
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    Over the next 300 days, Anguilla Anguilla
    larvae ride the ocean currents
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    6,500 km to the coast of Europe––
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    making one of the longest
    known marine migrations.
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    By the time they arrive, they’ve grown
    approximately 45 mm,
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    and transformed into semi-transparent
    glass eels.
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    It’s not just their appearance
    that’s changed.
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    If most marine fish entered brackish
    costal waters,
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    their cells would swell with freshwater
    in a lethal explosion.
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    But when glass eels reach the coast,
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    their kidneys shift to retain more salt
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    and maintain their blood’s
    salinity levels.
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    Swarms of these newly freshwater
    fish migrate up streams and rivers,
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    sometimes piling on top of each other
    to clear obstacles and predators.
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    Those that make it upstream develop
    into opaque elvers.
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    Having finally arrived in their hunting
    grounds,
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    elvers begin to eat everything they
    can fit in their mouths.
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    These omnivores grow in proportion
    to their diets,
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    and over the next decade they develop
    into larger yellow eels.
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    In this stage, they grow
    to be roughly 80 cm,
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    and finally develop sexual organs.
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    But the last phase of eel life––
    and the secret of their reproduction––
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    remains mysterious.
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    In 1896, researchers identified
    leptocepheli as larval eels,
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    and deduced that they had come to
    Europe from somewhere in the Atlantic.
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    However, to find this mysterious breeding
    ground,
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    someone would have to perform an
    unthinkable survey of the ocean
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    for larvae no larger than 30mm.
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    Enter Johannes Schmidt.
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    For the next 18 years, this Danish
    oceanographer
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    trawled the coasts of four continents,
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    hunting down increasingly
    tiny leptocepheli.
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    Finally, in 1921, he found the smallest
    larvae yet,
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    on the southern edge
    of the Sargasso Sea.
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    Despite knowledge of their round trip
    migration,
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    scientists still haven’t observed
    mating in the wild,
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    or found a single eel egg.
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    Leading theories suggest that eels
    reproduce
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    in a flurry of external fertilization,
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    in which clouds of sperm fertilize
    free-floating eggs.
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    But the powerful currents and
    tangling seaweed of the Sargasso Sea
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    have made this theory
    difficult to confirm.
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    Researchers don’t even know where to look,
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    since they’ve yet to successfully track
    an eel
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    over the course of its return migration.
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    Until these challenges can be met,
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    the eel’s ancient secret will continue
    slip through our fingers.
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Title:
No one can figure out how eels have sex - Lucy Cooke
Speaker:
Dan Kwartler
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:42

English subtitles

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