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Are naked mole rats the strangest mammals? - Thomas Park

  • 0:07 - 0:10
    What mammal has
    the social life of an insect,
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    the cold-bloodedness of a reptile,
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    and the metabolism of a plant?
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    Bald and buck-toothed, naked mole-rats
    may not be pretty,
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    but they’re extraordinary.
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    With a lifespan of 30 years,
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    their peculiar traits have evolved
    over millions of years
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    to make them uniquely suited
    to survive harsh conditions,
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    especially long periods without oxygen.
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    In the deserts of East Africa,
    naked mole-rats feed on root vegetables.
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    They dig for the roots with teeth that
    can move independently, like chopsticks.
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    But even with these special teeth,
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    a single naked mole rat doesn’t stand
    a chance of finding enough food;
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    the roots are large and
    nutritious, but scattered far and wide.
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    A large workforce has
    a much better chance,
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    so naked mole rats live in colonies.
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    Similar to ants, bees, and termites,
    they build giant nests.
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    Housing up to 300 mole rats,
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    these colonies feature complex
    underground tunnel systems,
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    nest chambers,
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    and community bathrooms.
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    Also like insects, naked mole rats
    have a rigid social structure.
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    The dominant female, the queen,
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    and two to three males
    that she chooses
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    are the only naked mole rats
    in the colony who have babies.
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    All the other naked mole rats,
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    male and female,
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    are either soldiers, who defend
    the colony from possible invaders,
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    or workers.
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    Teams of workers are dispatched
    to hunt for roots,
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    and their harvest feeds the whole colony.
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    Living in a colony helps naked mole rats
    find enough food,
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    but when so many animals live in
    the same underground space,
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    oxygen quickly runs out.
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    Mammals need a lot of oxygen;
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    we use it to make the energy
    that fuels everything
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    from maintaining our body temperatures,
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    to our heartbeats,
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    to voluntary movements.
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    Without oxygen, we quickly die.
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    In fact, no other mammal could survive
    the oxygen depletion
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    experienced in a naked mole rat colony.
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    Naked mole rats can thrive in low oxygen
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    in part because they’ve abandoned
    one of the body functions
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    that requires the most oxygen:
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    thermoregulation.
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    Most mammals are warm-blooded,
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    meaning they have to keep
    their body temperature consistent.
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    Naked mole rats don’t get enough
    oxygen to do this.
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    Instead, they’re the only mammals
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    whose body temperature fluctuates
    with their environment,
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    making them cold-blooded, like reptiles.
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    They also have a special
    type of hemoglobin,
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    the molecule in the blood
    that transports oxygen.
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    Their hemoglobin is much stickier
    for oxygen than ours
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    and can pick oxygen up
    even when it’s scarce.
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    In response to a real oxygen emergency,
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    naked mole rats enter
    a state of suspended animation.
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    They stop moving,
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    slow their breathing,
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    and dramatically lower their heart rate.
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    This greatly reduces the amount of energy,
    and therefore oxygen, they need.
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    At the same time, they begin
    to metabolize fructose, like a plant.
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    Fructose is a sugar that can be used
    to make energy without burning oxygen.
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    Usually, mammals metabolize
    a different sugar called glucose
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    that makes more energy than fructose,
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    but glucose only works
    when oxygen’s available.
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    Human brain and heart cells have
    some cellular machinery to use fructose,
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    but not nearly as much as naked mole rats.
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    Naked mole rats are, in fact, the only
    mammals known to have this ability.
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    While we can hope humans won’t ever need
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    to exclusively live
    in underground tunnels,
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    there are many situations where
    we would benefit from needing less oxygen.
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    During heart attacks
    and other medical emergencies,
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    people often die or sustain debilitating
    organ damage from oxygen deprivation.
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    Could we replicate the naked mole rat’s
    use of the fructose pathway
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    for human health?
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    It took millions of years of evolution
    to bring the behavior of an insect,
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    the temperature regulation of a reptile,
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    and the energy production of a plant
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    together in one little mammal,
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    but maybe, with enough study,
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    we can replicate just a few
    of their wild adaptations.
Title:
Are naked mole rats the strangest mammals? - Thomas Park
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:47

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