Parasitic viruses, oh my!

Sep 09, 2011 22:38


I love Ed Yong’s blog, Not Exactly Rocket Science. He’s joined Alton Brown as a charter member of my Geeky Crush Club.

This one’s about parasites that influence the behavior of their hosts, including driving them to their deaths.

At the top of its plant, the caterpillar liquefies. Its body almost seems to melt. As it does, it releases millions of ( Read more... )

weird science, animal planet

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Comments 8

e_moon60 September 10 2011, 03:49:38 UTC
Since minds ARE bodies--in the sense that neural tissue is a physical not "mental" that part is easy. The specificity of the response is...trickier. Though maybe not...hmmm. Some caterpillars climb anyway...the webworm that afflicts pecan trees, for instance. Yes, it would help to know the photo-avoidant gene, to figure out just how the fluke reverses it to positive phototropism...or maybe just destroys it.

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kristine_smith September 10 2011, 04:08:29 UTC
The idea of "mind" control is the riveting bit, though. To find out that certain behaviors could be enforced/promoted by a certain type of bacteria in the gut or whatever that mosquito pumped into you when it bit you....

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e_moon60 September 10 2011, 04:29:08 UTC
Very sfnal, for sure. I'm trying to think now what precisely Weber used in one novel to do a latent mind-control thing. Was the vector biological? I don't recall.

And with the load of critters (using the term loosely) we have making up our personal ecosystems, how much of us is us? Would be really interesting if the part we think is most human were actually...something else.

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kristine_smith September 10 2011, 04:38:02 UTC
I swear I read a few months ago about a particular gut bug the presence of which influenced mood--people who had it felt happier than people who didn't--but damned if I can recall the details.

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trolleypup September 10 2011, 07:59:20 UTC
If the nightmares aren't bad enough, go get Parasite Rex. *shudders*

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kristine_smith September 10 2011, 22:27:48 UTC
I'm not sure that would be a good idea....

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trolleypup September 11 2011, 07:32:36 UTC
Pretty much, but it is a fine expansion on this idea...just know how profoundly disturbing the techniques that parasites have evolved.

Maybe I should just mail you one...along with a book that shows the bright side of (other) things...

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