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无私的海蜗牛# Animals - 动物园
I*i
1
http://www.geekosystem.com/snails-carry-other-dads-young/
Marine Whelk Snails Are The Ocean’s Daddy Day Care, But Less Awful
Marine whelk snails carry their young on their back, toting their eggs
around for weeks after mating. The notion is not actually that uncommon
under the seas — male pipefish and seahorses are also known to take on
surprisingly active paternal roles, like gestating their own young. However,
a recent analysis of marine whelk eggs by researchers at UC Davis showed
something surprising — the whelks aren’t just carrying their own kids on
their back, but offspring from as many as 25 other males.
Eggs fertilized by the male’s own DNA may make up just 25% of the whole
baby load they’re carrying. Even worse, early hatching whelk snails
continue to develop by eating their unborn brothers and sisters, so only a
few of the hundreds of eggs carried by the male will make it to maturity.
That means only about 1 in 4 of the snails the proud papa finally rears
after a month of carrying them around on his back will be biologically his.
The results of the study, published in the journal Ecology Letters, mark the
first time the male of any species has been found raising young other than
his own.
Whelk eggs need an anchor to keep from being set adrift and turned into a
delicious, high protein snack for other animals. But in the marine whelk’s
stomping grounds — the mudflats off the coast of Baja California —
suitable rocks are few and far between. So after mating, the female marine
whelk deposits a fertilized egg capsule on the next best thing, attaching it
to the back of her most recent paramour.
Since both male and female whelk snails are amazingly promiscuous — there’
s really just not a lot else to do on tidal flats — the snails can end up
carrying multiple egg capsules on their backs. Each capsule can contain
hundreds of eggs, and those eggs can be fertilized by dozens of different
males. The biological cost of carrying those eggs is high for the male —
they spend a lot of energy carrying the eggs, and make better targets for
predators like birds, but researchers suspect the cost is outweighed by the
benefit of being able to mate, suggesting that males who are willing to
carry the load for others may show themselves to be good dads, getting more
opportunities to mate in the first place.
Check out the video below for more details from the researchers.
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f*e
2
低等动物界的趣事很多,不过这个太诡异了
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n*g
3
海蜗牛很牛的。好像可以自身进行光合作用,自给自足,不会饿死。。
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i*s
4
公海螺也有后代被别的背着,不能算无私。
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I*i
5
对,也算公平。

【在 i*****s 的大作中提到】
: 公海螺也有后代被别的背着,不能算无私。
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w*k
6
啥意思,替别人养便宜孩子?
这个确实挺无私的

However,

【在 I***i 的大作中提到】
: http://www.geekosystem.com/snails-carry-other-dads-young/
: Marine Whelk Snails Are The Ocean’s Daddy Day Care, But Less Awful
: Marine whelk snails carry their young on their back, toting their eggs
: around for weeks after mating. The notion is not actually that uncommon
: under the seas — male pipefish and seahorses are also known to take on
: surprisingly active paternal roles, like gestating their own young. However,
: a recent analysis of marine whelk eggs by researchers at UC Davis showed
: something surprising — the whelks aren’t just carrying their own kids on
: their back, but offspring from as many as 25 other males.
: Eggs fertilized by the male’s own DNA may make up just 25% of the whole

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R*l
7
很混乱啊,它们的道德与我们的不同吧?
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