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Parasite tales: The jewel wasp's zombie slave - Carl Zimmer

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    I would like to introduce you
    to my favorite parasite.
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    There are millions that I could choose from
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    and this is it:
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    it's called the jewel wasp.
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    You can find it
    in parts of Africa and Asia.
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    It's a little under an inch long,
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    and it is a beautiful looking parasite.
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    Now, you may be saying to yourself,
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    "This is not a parasite.
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    It's not a tapeworm,
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    it's not a virus,
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    how could a wasp be a parasite?"
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    You are probably thinking
    about regular wasps,
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    you know, the ones that build
    paper nests as their house.
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    Well, the thing is that the jewel wasp
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    makes its house inside
    a living cockroach.
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    Here's how it happens.
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    A jewel wasp is flying around,
    looking for a cockroach.
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    When it sees one, it lands
    and bites on its wing.
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    So, I'll be the cockroach.
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    Be-wha! Bewha!
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    And the cockroach starts shaking it off,
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    "Get away from me!"
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    The wasp very quickly starts
    stinging the cockroach.
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    All of a sudden, the cockroach can't move,
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    for about a minute.
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    And then it recovers
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    and stands up.
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    It could run away now,
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    but it doesn't.
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    It just doesn't want to.
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    It just stays there.
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    It's become a zombie slave.
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    Again, I'm not making this up.
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    The wasp goes off,
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    it walks away and finds a hole
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    and digs it out, makes it into a burrow.
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    It walks back.
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    This can take up to half an hour.
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    The cockroach is still there.
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    What do we do now?
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    The wasps grabs onto one of the antenna,
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    bites down on it,
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    of the cockroach,
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    and pulls the cockroach.
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    And the cockroach says, "Alright,"
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    and walks like a dog on a leash.
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    The wasp takes it
    all the way down into the burrow.
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    The cockroach says, "Nice place."
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    The wasp takes care of some business
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    and then goes and leaves the burrow
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    and seals it shut,
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    leaving the cockroach entombed
    in darkness, still alive.
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    The cockroach says, "Alright,
    I'll stay here if you want."
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    Now, I mentioned that
    the cockroach took care,
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    ah, the wasp took care
    of a little business
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    before it left the burrow.
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    The business was laying an egg
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    on the underside of the cockroach.
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    The egg hatches.
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    Out comes a wasp larva.
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    It looks kind of like
    a maggot with big, nasty jaws.
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    It chews a hole into the cockroach
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    and starts to feed from the outside.
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    It gets bigger,
    like you can see over here.
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    And then when it gets big enough,
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    it decides to crawl into the hole,
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    into the cockroach.
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    So now it's inside
    the still-living cockroach
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    and the cockroach doesn't mind much.
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    This goes on for about a month.
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    The larva grows and grows and grows,
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    then makes a pupa,
    kind of like a cocoon.
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    Inside there it grows eyes,
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    it grows wings,
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    it grows legs,
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    the cockroach is still alive,
    still waiting.
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    Finally the wasp is ready to leave,
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    and that's when the cockroach finally dies
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    because the fullly-formed adult wasp
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    crawls out of the cockroach's dying body.
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    The wasp shakes itself off,
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    climbs out of the burrow,
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    goes and finds another wasp to mate with
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    to start this whole, crazy cycle again.
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    So, this is not science fiction,
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    this happens every day,
    all over the world.
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    And scientists are
    totally fascinated by this.
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    They're just starting to figure out
    how all this happens.
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    And, when you really start
    to look at the science of it,
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    you start to kind of respect
    this very creepy wasp.
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    You see, the thing is that
    when it attacks the cockroach,
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    it's not just stinging wildly,
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    it delivers two precise stings.
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    It knows this cockroach's nervous system
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    like you know the back of your hand.
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    The first sting goes to that spot there,
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    called the "walking rhythm generators,"
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    and, as you can guess,
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    those are the neurons that send signals
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    to the legs to move.
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    It blocks the channels
    that the neurons use
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    to send these signals.
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    So the cockroach wants to go,
    it wants to run away,
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    but it can't because
    it can't move its legs.
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    And that lasted for about a minute.
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    This is really sophisticated pharmacology.
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    We actually use the same method,
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    a drug called Ivermectin,
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    to cure river blindness,
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    which is caused by a parasitic worm
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    that gets into your eye.
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    If you take Ivermectin,
    you paralyze the worm
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    using the same strategy.
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    Now, we discovered this in the 1970s,
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    the wasp has been doing this for millions of years.
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    Then comes the second sting.
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    Now the second sting actually hits two places along the way.
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    And to try to imagine how this can happen,
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    I want you to picture yourself with a friend
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    who's got a very long, very, very scary looking needle.
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    And your friend,
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    or at least you thought he was your friend,
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    sticks it in your neck,
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    goes into your skull,
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    stops off at one part of your brain
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    and injects some drugs,
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    then keeps going in your brain
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    and injects some more.
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    These are two particular spots,
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    marked here, "SEG",
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    and you can see the tip of it in the brain, marked "Br".
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    Now, we can do this, but it's really hard for us.
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    It's called stereotactic drug delivery.
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    You have to put a patient in a big metal frame
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    to hold them still,
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    you need CAT Scans to know where you're going,
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    so you look at the picture and say,
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    "Are we going the right way?"
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    The jewel wasp has sensors on its stinger
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    and scientists think that it can actually feel its way
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    through the cockroach's brain until it gets
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    to the exact, right place,
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    and then penetrates an individual neuron
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    and then delivers the goods.
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    So, this is quite amazing stuff,
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    and what seems to happen then
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    is that the wasp is taking away the control
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    that the cockroach has over its own body.
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    It's taking away the cockroach's free will.
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    We didn't really appreciate that cockroaches
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    have free will until this wasp showed us.
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    And, we have no idea how it's doing this,
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    we don't know yet what the venom has in it
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    and we don't know which circuits
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    it's hitting in the cockroach's brain,
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    and I think that's why this is,
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    most of all, my favorite parasite
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    because we have so much left to learn from it.
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    Thank you very much.
Title:
Parasite tales: The jewel wasp's zombie slave - Carl Zimmer
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/parasite-tales-the-jewel-wasp-s-zombie-slave-carl-zimmer

This is stranger than science fiction. The jewel wasp and the cockroach have a disgusting and fascinating parasitic relationship. The jewel wasp stuns the cockroach, and months later, a jewel wasp hatches out of the cockroach. At TEDYouth 2012, Carl Zimmer walks us through how this happens and why it personally fascinates him.

Talk by Carl Zimmer.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
07:12

English subtitles

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