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  • The day starts normally enough. You give your pet some food and water. But later ...

  • ... in your pet's water dish, you find this.

  • A hairworm.

  • It didn't get here on its own.

  • It came out of a little cricket. Don't believe me?

  • OK.

  • These hairworms are gnarly parasites.

  • They actually control a cricket's mind to get to their home: the water.

  • The hairworm's journey starts innocently enough, in a river, as an egg ...

  • one of many in this long string.

  • The eggs grow into squiggly larvae, which get eaten by a mayfly larva that also lives in the river.

  • And inside the mayfly is exactly where the hairworm needs to be.

  • The hairworm uses this pointy part to burrow into the mayfly's flesh.

  • Then it curls up and waits.

  • Because, really, it's not after a mayfly.

  • It's after a cricket.

  • So it sits tight, while the mayfly larva turns into an adult and heads to dry land ...

  • where it just might get eaten by a cricket ...

  • that has no idea what it's in for.

  • Inside the cricket the hairworm goes at it, eating all the cricket's stored-up fat, for about a month.

  • The cricket loses its chirp, but the hairworm doesn't kill the cricket ...

  • ... because the worm needs a lift back to the water.

  • Crickets usually avoid bodies of water. They're not great swimmers.

  • So the worm takes over, boosting chemicals in the cricket's brain, which make the cricket

  • walk around mindlessly until it happens to reach water.

  • Scientists in France watched this infected cricket make a beeline for the pool.

  • The hairworm makes a break for it.

  • Still going.

  • Ugh, that's justugh.

  • But don't worry. They don't target humans.

  • Ready for more?

  • This one at the University of New Mexico ...

  • ... has a whole lot of hairworms inside it.

  • They don't waste any time, curling around each other to mate ...

  • even before they're fully outside the cricket.

  • But it's more than a gruesome spectacle of nature.

  • Learning about these hairworms could help scientists ...

  • understand parasites like toxoplasma ...

  • that make us very sick.

  • As for the crickets, don't feel bad.

  • If they don't drown, most of them survive their ordeal.

  • At least that's what scientists have seen in the lab.

  • They go back to being crickets and hopefully stay on dry land.

  • Hi, it's Lauren. Who's hungry for more after that?

  • We'd love to make more videos of amazing critters up close all year round.

  • But we need your help.

  • We're a member-supported PBS show from KQED, in San Francisco.

  • That means to grow, we need you, our YouTube fans, to support us on Patreon.

  • Are you in? Link is in the description. Thanks.

The day starts normally enough. You give your pet some food and water. But later ...

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B1 中級

これらの毛虫は生きているコオロギを食べて、その心をコントロールしています。 (These Hairworms Eat a Cricket Alive and Control Its Mind | Deep Look)

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    陳奕愷 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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