• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

The Platypus Doesn’t Have A Stomach, And Probably Never Will

May 10, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

It’s honestly no surprise that the first people to see platypuses thought they were fake; they look like someone woke up one day and decided to bung together a bizarre-looking mishmash of a duck, beaver, and otter. Take a peek inside a platypus, however, and they get even stranger – they don’t have a stomach.

Advertisement

Stomachs are a long-standing feature in vertebrate history, thought to have evolved for the first time in the form of gastric glands around 450 million years ago. But just because something’s been about for a long time doesn’t mean it has to stay.

Advertisement

Many vertebrates have ditched the organ, including the platypus, but also its fellow monotremes the echidnas and an estimated 20 to 27 percent of teleosts, a group that contains the vast majority of fish species. 

The platypus in particular is a great example of how the loss of such a feature usually goes hand in hand with the loss of the genes associated with it – which makes it very difficult to get it back.

A study from 2008 revealed that many of the key genes associated with stomach function had either become inactivated, or completely disappeared from the platypus genome (the entirety of an organism’s genetic information).

It marked an interesting addition to what scientists knew about vertebrate evolution. “All of these genes are highly conserved in vertebrates, reflecting a unique pattern of evolution in the platypus genome not previously seen in other mammalian genomes,” the authors wrote.

Advertisement

But were platypuses alone? After all, it’s not a guarantee that creatures who’ve lost a feature will also lose the genes linked to it. The cave-dwelling form of the Mexican tetra, for example, doesn’t have eyes, but it does still have the genes for developing them – they’ve just been silenced.

For the many animals who’ve lost a stomach, however, a team of scientists found that the associated genes have in fact been scrapped.

Filipe Castro and colleagues compared the genomes of 14 vertebrate species, including humans, mice, and zebrafish, to test their hypothesis that getting rid of the stomach through evolution is correlated with the loss of key gastric genes.

In doing so, they discovered that those without stomachs were all missing the genes encoding the gastric proton pump; this is the enzyme that acidifies the contents of the stomach and is often targeted in alleviating symptoms of acid reflux conditions in humans.

Advertisement

The genes encoding a class of enzymes that are released by stomach cells help to break down proteins, known as pepsinogens, were also missing – except in pufferfish and platypuses. They’d kept just one of the genes, but it didn’t have a stomach-related function.

Why did they lose them? The researchers theorize it could be down to dietary or environmental changes that meant they no longer had a need for the genes and so, in the course of evolution, gradually disappeared.

Regardless of why a stomachless animal lost the organ in the first place, since the related genes have been lost, it’s unlikely that they’ll ever get a stomach back. That’s because of a rule within evolutionary biology known as Dollo’s law, which treats evolution like a one-way street: once a complex trait is lost, it cannot be regained.

At least, most of the time – frogs certainly had other ideas.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Lithuania to fence first 110 km of Belarus border by April
  2. Japan ruling party manifesto calls for sharp rise in defence spending -Asahi
  3. Cheating On Your Spouse Can Be Highly Satisfying, Finds Study
  4. Mysterious Green Lightning “Ghosts” Of Earth’s Upper Atmosphere Have Finally Been Explained

Source Link: The Platypus Doesn’t Have A Stomach, And Probably Never Will

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • First Ever Leopard Bones Found At Provincial Roman Amphitheatre, Suggesting Bloody Gladiatorial Battles
  • The Solar System Might Be Moving Faster Than Expected – Or There’s Something Off With The Universe
  • Why Do People Who Take The “Spirit Molecule” Describe Such Similar Experiences?
  • The Most Devastating Symptom Of Alzheimer’s Finally Has An Explanation – And, Maybe Soon, A Treatment
  • Kissing Has Survived The Path Of Evolution For 21 Million Years – Apes And Human Ancestors Were All At It
  • NASA To Share Its New Comet 3I/ATLAS Images In Livestream This Week – Here’s How To Watch
  • Did People Have Bigger Foreheads In The Past? The Grisly Truth Behind Those Old Paintings
  • After Three Years Of Searching, NASA Realized It Recorded Over The Apollo 11 Moon Landing Footage
  • Professor Of Astronomy Explains Why You Can’t Fire Your Enemies Straight Into The Sun
  • Do We All See The Same Blue? Brilliant Quiz Shows The Subjective Nature Of Color Perception
  • Earliest Detailed Observations Of A Star Exploding Show True Shape Of A Supernova
  • Balloon-Mounted Telescope Captures Most Precise Observations Of First Known Black Hole Yet
  • “Dawn Of A New Era”: A US Nuclear Company Becomes First Ever Startup To Achieve Cold Criticality
  • Meet The Kodkod Of The Americas: Shy, Secretive, And Super-Small
  • Incredible Footage May Be First Evidence Wild Wolves Have Figured Out How To Use Tools
  • Raccoons In US Cities Are Evolving To Become More Pet-Like
  • How Does CERN’s Antimatter Factory Work? We Visited To Find Out
  • Elusive Gingko-Toothed Beaked Whale Seen Alive For First Time Ever
  • Candidate Gravitational Wave Detection Hints At First-Of-Its-Kind Incredibly Small Object
  • People Are Just Learning What A Baby Eel Is Called
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version