Placeholder Image

字幕表 動画を再生する

  • [ intro ]

  • People often talk about havingpuked their guts out

  • after a particularly nasty stomach bug or overindulging in tequila shots.

  • But, of course, humans don't actually do that.

  • It's just a metaphor we use.

  • But some animals do throw up their entire stomachs!

  • Which is gross, but also,

  • a really great example of how the same trait can evolve

  • in many species for a variety of reasons.

  • We've all been there

  • you're so sick that it feels like your entire stomach

  • is going to end up in the toilet.

  • Vomiting is a common behavior in vertebrates

  • since it helps eject bad stuff like poisonous substances.

  • But no matter how sick you are, your stomach remains securely in your body,

  • thanks to your lower esophageal sphincter, or LES

  • a ring of smooth muscle between the esophagus and the stomach.

  • It helps you keep your meals where they belong, too.

  • It's why you can lay down or even stand on your head

  • after a large meal without food coming back out your mouth.

  • So, thanks LES.

  • But sometimes, you do want what's in your stomach to...

  • not be in it anymore.

  • So the LES can relax and allow you to up-chuck.

  • Frogs and toads, on the other hand, don't have an LES.

  • And that means, when they vomit hard, their whole stomach can come out

  • though it doesn't always.

  • Still, it turns out being able to puke out your guts is kind of useful.

  • Just vomiting doesn't always expel things super effectively

  • like, say, if you're trying to puke out a living wasp or poisonous insect,

  • which in addition to being harmful, can be kind of grabby.

  • So, when some frogs and toads ingest those things,

  • they throw up their entire stomach.

  • It's called stomach or gastric eversion, meaningto turn inside out.”

  • And that's exactly what happens.

  • Since there's no distinct boundary between their esophagus and stomach,

  • their stomachs can flop out of their mouths,

  • kind of like turning a pocket inside out.

  • The prolapsed stomach then kind of hangs there,

  • allowing the animal to literally wipe away

  • anything that might be clinging to their stomach walls.

  • Weirdly enough,

  • it seems like frogs and toads usually use their right hand for this.

  • See, even though they don't have an LES,

  • their stomachs are still attached to their abdomens

  • by a continuous band of tissue.

  • And the bit attached to the right side of their stomachs is shorter.

  • So as the stomach everts, it's pulled to the right.

  • Frogs and toads aren't the only animals that can evert their stomachs, though.

  • Sharks and rays do this, too

  • and probably for similar reasons.

  • Many species dine on animals with bones or shells

  • materials which don't digest well,

  • so little bits can get kind of stuck in the mucous-y lining of their stomach .

  • So, they might just flip the whole thing out every so often to remove this debris.

  • In an article published in 2000, for example,

  • researchers from the UK observed a thornback ray rinsing

  • or vomiting upits stomach nine times

  • just minutes after it was given a barf-inducing food.

  • Not only that, but much like how frogs and toads use their hands,

  • sharks may use the edge of their mouths to wipe their stomach linings during eversion

  • ——at least, according to one observational report from 2005.

  • But there might be another reason some species are so quick to puke their guts out.

  • Sharks will also vomit when they're stressed,

  • and while they don't always perform gastric eversion, sometimes, they do.

  • And scientists believe this may be a defense mechanism.

  • Basically, it's easier to get away when your stomach is lighter and emptier.

  • In terms of puking to defend themselves, though,

  • sharks have nothing on sea cucumbers.

  • Many sea cucumbers engage in a strategy called autotomy:

  • they sacrifice parts of bodies to distract or ensnare a threat.

  • It's kind of like how some lizards detach their tails,

  • but in this case, thepartsbeing sacrificed are the cucumber's internal organs.

  • They literally eviscerate themselves.

  • For some species, this happens out the rear end and involves sticky parts

  • that can trap predators.

  • So, I guess you could say, poop their guts out.

  • But other species do puke their guts out.

  • When under attack, they eject pretty much their entire digestive tract

  • including intestines!—

  • out of their mouths.

  • Some also lose parts of their mouths, like the tentacles they use to snag their food.

  • And they may even barf up their gonads!

  • The idea is that these bits of them either gross out a hungry attacker

  • or distract them long enough for the cucumber to make a slow escape.

  • You might think losing your innards would be kind of a problem,

  • but the cucumber doesn't care what it sacrificed from what end,

  • because it can regenerate its internal organs in a matter of weeks.

  • Scientists are actually studying their incredible regeneration abilities

  • in the hopes of helping people after injuries or figuring out

  • how to grow transplantable tissues and organs.

  • Now, between sea cucumbers, sharks, and frogs,

  • you might think puking your guts out is a protective strategy.

  • But sea stars barf their stomachs out offensively to devour prey.

  • Sea stars actually have two stomachs: the cardiac stomach and the pyloric stomach.

  • When a star finds something to eat, it pushes its cardiac stomach out of its mouth

  • which, by the way, is located on the underside

  • and at this point, right on top of its future meal.

  • It can even squeeze this stomach into a small gap in a clam or mussel shell if necessary.

  • The everted stomach then does what stomachs do best

  • it secretes digestive enzymes which break down the prey into a soupy,

  • chowder-like substance, which it'll absorb back into its body's ten digestive glands.

  • The cardiac stomach is then pulled back through the mouth,

  • and the food is transferred to the pyloric stomach to finish digesting.

  • So yeahlots of animals puke their guts out.

  • But they don't all do it for the same reasons.

  • Let's just be glad we don't wipe our stomach linings whenever we eat something that's

  • a little bit off.

  • If you're eager to learn more about vomiting

  • and who isn't?!—

  • you might want to check out our episode on why kids puke so much.

  • And if you're just eager to learn, period,

  • consider clicking that subscribe button and ringing the notification bell.

  • That way, you'll get an alert every time there's a new SciShow episode to watch.

  • [ outro ]

[ intro ]

字幕と単語

ワンタップで英和辞典検索 単語をクリックすると、意味が表示されます

B2 中上級

動物がガッツポーズをする3つの理由(文字通り (3 Reasons Animals Puke Their Guts Out (Literally))

  • 6 0
    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
動画の中の単語