National Geographic: The Body Changers (2000)

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National Geographic: The Body Changers (2000)

Post by bunniefuu »

In the beginning,

there is the fertilized egg.

Its form couldn't be simpler.

But this will change.

It's a piece of work to craft

a creature from a single cell.

By the time it enters the world,

every living thing has experienced

an odyssey of alteration.

Change doesn't stop

with hatching or birth.

Growing up is also

a story of transformation.

A newborn kangaroo can grow

over 50,000 times in weight.

Some creatures do far more than

simply grow up.

They reinvent themselves.

A fish can start life as a female

but end up as a male.

A bird can grow or shrink a brain area

for song to suit the season.

Polliwogs become frogs.

Caterpillars turn into butterflies.

We learn few more curious facts

than these.

But it's easy to lose sight of just

how astonishing these changes are!

And even weirder transformers

live among us.

Turn and face the strange.

Meet the body changers.

"Hey, Emma, come here!"

Compared to the epic alteration

of a caterpillar,

our own changes may seem subtle.

But there's no denying that

kids change shape

as they turn into grown-ups.

The brain kicks off our own

sexual transformations.

Girls tend to get curvier

from estrogen and other hormones.

A child's body,

and that of many other young creatures,

changes shape when it reaches

the age for reproduction.

These alterations prepare us

to compete for mates,

to have babies,

and to care for them.

Boys change in their own way.

They add muscle.

Shoulders become broader.

The body gets hairier.

Vocal cords lengthen as does the jaw.

A child's journey to adulthood

is a long one.

A grown-up is not just

a scaled-up kid,

but one rebuilt from head to toe.

Look back at

the odyssey of growing up,

and we see that

even our faces change shape,

starting in infancy with small chins,

huge eyes, and plump cheeks.

We are all body changers

when it comes to growing up

and growing old.

It may be no accident that

many baby animals have different

face shapes from their parents.

Adults find baby features irresistible,

a hard-wired system

that promotes infant care.

Silvered leaf monkeys

have Day-Glo offspring.

No one knows why,

unless it's a reminder

to rough-and-tumble mothers

to handle the baby with care.

The young and old of many animals

have different colors,

sometimes to conceal newborns

that are less able to flee danger.

A young, sexually mature male orangutan

has a distinguished, mournful visage.

But in middle age,

his face changes shape.

His new jowly look

is a badge of power.

Changes in our own faces

tell many stories.

A face that forms symmetrically

in the womb

and stays that way through adulthood

can be a mark of good nutrition

and resistance to disease.

Is it any wonder we are highly attuned

to symmetry and find it beautiful?

Old age brings new changes

as our faces transform again,

keeping a faithful record

of wear and tear, loves and losses.

As we change ourselves in the

subtle ways that human beings do,

we're surrounded by creatures

that become entirely new.

Around us are animals

that live out the youthful fantasy of

sprouting wings and flying like a bird.

But we also share the world

with animals

whose stories of change

echo darker myths.

Hercules' enemy,

the many-headed Hydra,

sprouted two new heads

for every one lopped off.

Nature nearly matches legend.

The salamander has powers of

regeneration bordering on the magical.

It will need these talents,

for it lives not in a fairy tale,

but rather in a world of real dangers.

A red-eared slider enters the stream.

The salamander picks

an unlucky moment for a swim.

It's a vulnerable creature,

unarmored and undisguised.

The turtle has nipped off

the salamander's hind leg.

Over three months, the creature

miraculously transforms itself

back to an earlier stage of life.

The genes that grew the leg

in the first place are activated again.

The new leg will be indistinguishable

from the original.

Unique among animals with backbones,

the salamander can regrow

not just limbs

but the lens of the eye

and even part of the brain.

This beast can survive

a bite to the head!

The Hydra lives.

The power to change shape or color

offers a special edge in life.

Some creatures change

to stay hidden.

Others transform

to find new kinds of food.

Still other animals change

for upward mobility,

for the chance to fly or leap

to another pond.

This lake is home to two body changers

that can be lifelong rivals.

A dragonfly nymph spends the first

part of its life beneath the surface.

Everything about this creature

seems honed for water.

It is tapered for speed.

Its head has powerful jaws and huge

eyes-the better to catch prey with.

It breathes through an a**l gill,

also handy for jet propulsion.

It's hard to believe

that this pond predator,

sleek as a torpedo, accurate and deadly,

will one day take to the air.

Wings are already forming.

An amazing makeover is beginning.

But the dragonfly will not be able to

complete its body change

without regular meals.

Sharing the pond are

gray treefrog tadpoles.

You can't get any fishier than this

without actually being a fish.

A tadpole breathes through

internal gills.

Its long flat tail propels it

like a fish's tail.

Inside, powerful front legs have formed

and are nearly ready to burst out.

But not every ungainly swimmer will

live to be reborn as an elegant leaper.

With a secret w*apon

locked and loaded,

the dragonfly nymph

waits for an opportunity.

Folded up under the nymph's head

is a hinged lip with a grasping tip.

This tadpole's dreams of frogdom

are dashed.

But in these death throes,

a chemical is released

which fellow tadpoles

take to heart or to tail.

In two weeks, tadpoles in the area

transform remarkably.

Their tails turn a shade of red.

The colored tail may protect tadpoles

from att*ck

like a neon sign flashing "Don't Eat."

Why this works, no one is sure,

but there's no need to turn tail

with a tail turned red.

The pond is abuzz with

changing bodies.

Not only are tadpoles about to

turn into frogs,

they've already changed colors.

At the age of five weeks, tadpoles,

both red- and clear-tailed,

shed their underwater ways.

Rear legs emerge slowly.

Front legs pop out of gill slits.

The tail is absorbed.

This frog may not have turned into

a prince,

but the tadpole's transformation

is no less astonishing.

An air-breathing, bug-eating,

lily-hopping, sweet-singing adult

has emerged from a silent

scum-sucking swimmer with gills.

Now is the dragonfly nymph's time

to change.

It's been lurking in the shallows

by the shore,

waiting for just the right moment

to abandon the water forever.

Tonight is perfectly calm,

since rain or wind could dislodge

the dragonfly at a vulnerable moment.

The nymph has crawled out of the water

and fastened itself to a stem.

It is now committed to the air.

A brand new creature

emerges from the old.

The husk of the nymph splits open.

In a single magical hour,

an adult struggles out.

At first, its goggle eyes look like

deflated beach balls.

But soon they are pumped up

to full size,

some of the keenest eyes

in the insect realm.

In the remaining hours before dawn,

the dragonfly pumps blood

into its soft, wet wings,

doubling their length.

The dragonfly has changed from

a jet-powered aquatic hunter

armed with a hydraulic spear

to a peerless aerialist

that will stalk on the wing.

About two hours after emerging,

the dragonfly takes flight.

Once master of the pond bottom,

the dragonfly now controls

the air space above.

No other insect devotes as big

a share of its body weight

to flight muscles as the dragonfly.

Scuba certification has been traded

in for a pilot's license.

As larvae,

dragonflies once hunted tadpoles.

Adult frogs sometimes have the chance

to even the score.

A dragonfly is a curve ball

on the wing.

There's nothing wrong with

the occasional whiff

if now and then you connect with

a solid double.

Just as body changes can take place

in individual creatures,

so they can occur across generations.

That's evolution.

Natural selection is the long process

of picking winners and losers

among organisms that differ slightly

from their parents.

Without body-changing over generations,

evolution would come to a standstill.

As it is, change adds to change

to create the entire parade of life.

Life may have begun with a blob

that by chance transformed.

When alterations were successful,

the transformer thrived

and transformed again.

One of natural selection's

winning picks

is the trick of morphing

during a single lifetime.

Plankton is a potpourri of larvae,

body changers of many species

at an early stage of life.

Creatures like this have an edge:

each stage can be honed

for a different job.

Now they are shaped for spreading

around-drifting on the currents.

Soon these beasts will be changed

beyond recognition

into new forms tailored

for feeding and reproduction.

One member of the plankton,

a crab larva,

starts life with scant

resemblance to its parents.

It shares the ocean with

another tiny drifter, the seaslug.

This relative of the snail

hatches wearing a transparent shell,

a suit of crystalline armor.

Seaslug and crab, similar as larvae,

may confront each other as adults,

as different as two animals can be.

Having shed its shell,

the seaslug eventually becomes

an adult four inches long.

It now has a new organ,

a feeding hood.

The billowy hood caresses eel grass

to catch food like skeleton shrimp.

Like a submarine Venus fly trap,

the seaslug closes up,

trapping prey like skeleton shrimp

with a zipper like seal.

Growing on the seaslug's back

are other new organs,

fleshy paddles

that will soon save its life.

As the seaslug feeds,

it is being watched

by its former plankton mate.

The crab has changed into

a formidable scavenger

with molar-like grinders on its claws.

Blind except perhaps to light and dark,

the seaslug approaches danger.

The crab pinches at the seaslug,

as hard to grab as a water balloon.

Finally the crab gets purchase.

But it gets only

a small serving of seaslug,

whose paddles pop off by design.

The seaslug swims away

with wild undulations.

Only a stump remains

where once there was a paddle.

The missing organ

may eventually grow back.

Once a tiny drifter, this body changer

is now rebuilt for escape.

Up the water column without a paddle,

the seaslug leaves the crab,

its fellow transformer,

with a meager souvenir.

Transformation is not

just the privilege of living things.

The morphing of clouds may offer

nothing more than delight.

The morphing of bodies serves

a more important goal: survival.

In the Arizona desert,

the weather shifts late in June.

After eight crispy months,

skies darken.

The monsoon has arrived.

The pounding of the rain has stirred

strange creatures beneath the soil.

In this small, evaporating pond,

animals race against the clock

to transform.

Tadpoles of the spadefoot toad

must absorb their tails,

grow lungs, sprout legs.

They must transform from

fish-like swimmers

with gills to hopping air-breathers.

If changing from tadpole to toad

isn't miracle enough,

tadpoles of this species have two ways

to do it,

the nice way and the not so nice.

In this hot summer,

the pond is shrinking quickly.

It could become a death-trap,

a cauldron of bouillabaisse.

As the water level drops,

time is running out

for the tadpoles to become toads.

Meanwhile, another creature

joins the fray.

Fairy shrimp may have lain dormant

underground as eggs for years,

waiting for just the right conditions

to rush through their lives.

As the pool dries up,

it gets more crowded.

Tadpoles bump into more and more of

these crustaceans.

Advantage: tadpole.

If they end up snacking on

lots of Sonoran scampi,

the tadpoles sense that their pond

is shrinking fast.

There's something about fairy shrimp

that throws a chemical switch

inside some of the tadpoles.

And these gentle browsers now

begin to transform into brutes

that will stop at nothing

to become a toad.

Some of the tadpoles are

turning into cannibals!

This is body-changing with attitude.

The cannibals are lighter

in color and larger.

A huge muscle forms in the jaw,

the better to grab their neighbors with.

We're no longer on golden pond.

The cannibals grow at breakneck speed

on their unneighborly diet.

On the fast track, they will need only

two and a half weeks to become toads.

The slower, mild-mannered tadpoles

need six weeks to grow up.

The extra time helps them become

healthier adults than the cannibals.

But often in the desert,

time is a luxury.

And the race goes to

the swift and brutal.

It was a remarkable turning point

in evolution

when a fish transformed

to emerge from the sea,

gulp air and drag itself around.

But what took eons in evolution is an

everyday occurrence in tadpoles.

To reach adulthood, spadefoot toads

must live fast and hard,

then dig down into cool damp soil

before the next drought arrives.

For others in the desert,

the season of change has also arrived.

On an acacia blossom, an egg barely

visible to the human eye hatches.

A bristled beast emerges.

This caterpillar has a problem.

If it's ever going to become

a butterfly,

it must first survive its life

as a larva.

The desert is alive with predators

like ants and wasps.

This caterpillar has

an ingenious defense.

It will soon enlist one of its enemies,

but only after it transforms to develop

special organs for manipulating ants.

At the base of the acacia tree,

ants have dug a nest.

Most ants like nothing better than

dismantling caterpillars.

But these ants love them, intact.

They will protect the caterpillar.

That's because the ants march to

the b*at of a different drummer.

The caterpillar has become

the drummer.

This is the sound

the caterpillar makes

with body vibrations

so tiny we can't see them.

But ants feel the b*at through twigs

and stems and come running.

A strange rendezvous of

two very different creatures

is about to take place.

The caterpillar has, in effect,

shouted to the ants,

"Come and get it!"

It's not a ploy.

The caterpillar doles out sugary

droplets which the ants lap up.

For the price of a few servings

of food,

the caterpillar is surrounded by

friendly ants.

Not a bad thing to have

the neighborhood

toughs at your beck and call

when you have a soft body

and a nasty array of predators.

This remarkable relationship will last

for most of the caterpillar's life.

The caterpillar now transforms

into a new stage.

Tentacles have appeared,

strange chemical transmitters,

that seem to rile up the ants.

The caterpillar needs the ants

to be ferocious: danger is near.

Another kind of ant lives nearby,

a predatory species.

An enemy ant has grabbed

the caterpillar.

The friendly ants rally

in a desperate tug-of-w*r.

Not all battles can be won.

But without the aid of bodyguard ants,

not as many caterpillars would live

to become butterflies.

About ten days after hatching,

the caterpillar descends the tree.

It's hard to believe this creature

will soon shed its wormy form,

sprout wings and head for the heavens.

But that is the miracle

of a caterpillar.

Down in the enclave of the ant nest,

the caterpillar is reborn as a pupa.

Hunkered inside what looks like

a sarcophagus,

the pupa is a creature in the midst

of a total makeover.

Nerves are being rewired.

Old organs are dissolving;

new ones are being built.

The ants tend this defenseless animal

even though it will no longer

feed them.

After ten days,

one of the most radical redesigns

in all of nature is complete.

The pupa has become an adult,

a butterfly.

This creature's long relationship

with ants is now over.

The butterfly struggles to emerge.

It must move quickly.

In fact, if the butterfly isn't

out of the nest in minutes,

it will be devoured by the same ants

that protected it for almost

its entire life.

As larvae, these creatures were

basically enormous digestive tracts

hauled around on caterpillar treads.

As adults, they are flying machines

dedicated to sex.

If we couldn't witness a caterpillar

turn into a butterfly,

we'd never believe

they were the same animal.

It's as astounding as a Cuisin art

transforming into a 747.

Some animals undergo one

major transformation in their lives.

Others change fashions

every year with the seasons.

Dogs may wear heavy coats in winter.

But lengthening days will cause

the fine underhairs to drop out.

Soon, this dog will be cooler

in his new spring wardrobe.

Some animals change

not only their coat but their color.

The arctic fox wears white

for stealthy winter hunting.

By summer, the coat is less than

half as thick.

Arctic birds like the ptarmigan

also change color.

In summer, they're as mottled as

the terrain.

By winter, the ptarmigan is a bird

of a different color.

Other prey species

like the arctic hare

must track the seasons

with their wardrobe.

Understatement is de rigueur.

If some animals change

for the seasons on the outside,

others are transforming

on the inside.

All over North America,

redwing blackbirds prepare for spring

with remarkable changes.

Males arrive from winter havens

to squabble for territories.

No one gets a home

without singing for it.

But this male is out of practice.

He hasn't sung much at all

for half a year.

But he's been quietly transforming.

It's now opening day

of a new season of song.

The transformation was

all in his head, literally.

The blackbird is a brain changer.

Over the past months, one tiny area

in his brain devoted to song

has more than doubled in volume.

With his new swelled head,

this male now woos females with song.

When a female becomes all a-flutter,

the serenade has succeeded.

The happy new couple flies off

to the shrubbery.

It's time for a little

two-in-the-bush.

The burgeoning brain of the male may

have kept the sexes in tune this season.

Transformation promoted communication

which helped launch the next generation.

Late in the summer, blackbirds glean

the fields for the last easy morsels.

Males will transform once again.

The brain's song area dwindles,

along with sweet serenades for sex.

Birds are in good company when

it comes to changing for reproduction.

For most of its life,

a flowering plant makes stems and

leaves, a single pattern repeated.

But when the right conditions arrive,

of temperature, daylight, or rainfall,

a plant will suddenly transform,

producing a brilliant package of

sex and advertising.

As one poet put it,

"The flower is a leaf mad with love."

Deer browse among blossoms,

eating tender leaves and grasses.

A once flowering feast is

transformed into a pile of dung.

In the leftovers of a deer's meal,

two organisms will each

struggle to survive.

A fungus begins to grow threads

invisible to the human eye.

The fungus is transforming

for reproduction.

It sh**t up st*lks as tall as

an eyelash is long.

Each stem lifts ripening spores

above the deer's ground zero.

Meanwhile, tiny larvae are growing.

The deer was infected

with a roundworm.

To survive, these wriggling parasites

must leave their dump

of a neighborhood to reach a new deer.

So the worm climbs a fungus stalk.

Just below a black beret

packed with spores,

water pressure builds.

When the cap bursts, spores can be

sh*t up to eight feet away.

And worms will fly.

One of the parasites

lands several feet away.

A passing deer eats it,

an inadvertent diet of worms.

The roundworm has found a host,

and millions of scattered spores

await their fate.

Wintertime.

And the living's hard

in the far north.

At least for a relative of

the deer... caribou.

The landscape is littered

with body parts.

Antlers.

Up to 20 pounds of bone,

grown every year and discarded.

Males start to grow antlers

every spring,

a transformation

from bald to bedecked.

Antlers are living tissue crisscrossed

with blood vessels and nerve endings.

The sensitive fuzzy skin

is called velvet.

Each caribou has a signature pattern

which can grow back year after year.

It would be no less wondrous

if we were to sprout a fresh arm,

the same arm, every year.

When antlers stop growing

late in the summer,

another transformation takes place.

The tender velvet dies and is scraped

away until it hangs in tatters.

Each male is now crowned with

spikes of unfeeling bone.

Fighting is one reason for

the male caribou's transformation.

And this helps solve the mystery of

why antlers shed their velvet:

You can't fight a battle if your sword

can bleed

and is sensitive to the touch.

Some creatures grow head weaponry

every year.

Others, only a single time.

Altogether, male caribou

have plenty of company

when it comes to transformations

for battle.

If some animals transform

what's on their head,

others change what's in it.

This male's appearance

and his personality

will transform with his fortunes.

Meet a member of the cichlid family.

He's something of

a piscine Austin Powers.

"Oh behave, baby!"

He's the proud owner of

a prime bachelor pad,

about one square foot of lake bottom.

He's dressed for success,

or, rather, because of it.

His dark stripes and sharp colors are

the marks of a territory holder.

Nearby lurks a male with

the dull colors of a wannabe.

In fact, he looks just like a female.

If fish experience envy,

this one covets his neighbor's life.

The flashy bachelor invites

a female over to suck gravel.

This counts as fine dining

in these shallows.

After dinner, the couple retires

to the grotto for a little spawning.

There's only so much a guy can take.

The wannabe has switched

on his colors,

a kind of warpaint,

to prepare for battle.

The wannabe wins.

And he is transformed by victory.

He retains his bright colors.

His grievances are redressed

as much as he himself has been

redressed in the wardrobe of a winner.

A more profound transformation will

soon take place inside his body.

In a week his gonads will plump up

thirty-fold in weight

and a brain area dedicated to sex

will increase eight times in volume.

At last the new bachelor is ready to

take his enlarged gonads for a spin.

Guided by his bigger brain area

for sex,

he courts a female with macho motions

and furling fins.

But no male holds a long-term lease

in these gravel beds.

The new owner soon discovers the

high cost of upkeep for his pad.

Neighboring bachelors are

always testing the lot lines.

A neighbor att*cks.

The new territory holder is defeated.

He switches off his fancy colors.

His gonads and brain region for sex

will soon shrink.

He rejoins the ranks of the wannabes.

Some body changers

save their most dramatic

transformations for the end of life.

Sockeye salmon are beckoned

from the ocean

back to the Alaskan streams

where many hatched five years ago.

Some must travel hundreds of miles

in an odyssey that can take weeks.

Along the way,

salmon will undergo one of the most

remarkable changes in all of nature.

Head shape starts to change.

Every salmon will die

by the journey's end.

The only question is

whether they will get the chance

to complete their transformation.

Many will be stopped here by

a terrible gauntlet of brown bears.

On this journey of the condemned,

the salmon throw themselves

upriver with abandon.

The salmon that escape,

especially the males,

will now carry on

with their transformation.

The head turns green and body red

as the fish prepare to die,

on their own terms.

Few have made it this far.

Fewer yet will

finish the transformation.

Approaching the spawning grounds,

the males achieve their final shape.

A sleek silvery male,

over a few weeks,

transforms into a gaudy hunchback

with a toothy grimace.

The skin turns smooth and unfishlike

as the body absorbs its scales.

In tatters after their journey,

salmon arrive in the shallows

where they hatched.

They've lost up

to a third of their weight.

Not to mention their looks.

Only one in a thousand has completed

this harrowing roundtrip.

With her own changed body,

a female sweeps out a gravel nest

and releases her eggs.

A male offers his swirl of milt.

This grotesque body change

is still a mystery.

Does the male's hooked face help in

jousting matches with rivals?

Does the female choose a male

for his new colors,

a sexy but reckless display

that draws the fire of predators?

All that's certain is that this change

is the creature's last.

And perhaps in death,

the final transformation,

the parents offer their decaying

bodies to feed the pools

where the next generation will grow.

The life of every creature

is a journey of change.

So too is the path of all life

since the very dawn of living things.

Though we may resist change,

or wish to turn back the clock,

no one can tether time.

We are all transformers,

for the story of life

is the story of change.
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