Extreme Nature. Mark Carwardine

Extreme Nature - Mark  Carwardine


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Some catfish have such super-receptors that they can smell compounds at 1 part to 10 billion parts of water.

      The likelihood is, though, that moths are the record-holders, especially the males. They use their antennae to home in on the sex pheromones, or chemical allures, released by females and can even detect if these females are on plants suitable for egg-laying. Some females release deviously small amounts of pheromone, to make sure that only those males with the most highly tuned antennae can follow the trails. The likely record-holder for the best known sense of smell is the polyphemus moth: just one pheromone molecule landing on a male’s antennae will trigger a response in his brain.

NAMEhumpback whale Megaptera novaeangliae
LOCATIONoceans worldwide
ABILITYsinging the longest and most complex songs in the animal kingdom
images

      © Flip Nicklin/Minden Pictures/FLPA

      Drop a hydrophone into the water in an area where humpback whales are breeding and you may hear a baffling medley of moans, groans, roars, snores, squeaks and whistles. These are the hauntingly beautiful sounds made by male humpbacks, which are famous for singing the longest and most complex of animal songs. Since most singing takes place at the breeding grounds, it is probably used to woo females and to warn away rival males – but the songs may also have more subtle meanings and nuances that we do not yet understand.

      A song can last for as long as half an hour, and as soon as the whale has finished, it often goes back to the beginning and sings it all over again. Each song consists of several main components, or phrases, which are always sung in the same order and repeated a number of times, but are forever being refined and improved. All the humpbacks in one area sing broadly the same song, incorporating each other’s improvisations as they go along. This means that the song heard one day is different from the one being heard several months later and, in this way, the entire composition changes over a period of several years.

      Meanwhile, humpback whales in other oceans sing very different compositions. They probably all croon about the same trials and tribulations in life, but the differences are so distinctive that experts can tell where a whale was recorded simply by listening to the intricacies of its own special song.

NAMEisopod Cymothoa exigua
SIZEup to 4 cm long
ABILITYeating and then mimicking the tongue of the spotted rose snapper fish
images

      © Matthew Gilligan

      This is probably the world’s most specialised and gruesome isopod – one of a group of crustaceans including woodlice, marine gribbles and slaters. Most isopods lead perfectly normal lives as herbivores, scavengers or carnivores, but some are parasites. Cymothoa exigua has a tendancy to select the mouth of the spotted rose snapper fish for its hangout.

      Latching on to the fish’s tongue with its hooked legs (pereopods), it feeds on mucus, blood and tissue, gradually eating away the tongue. Gripping onto the tongue stub, the isopod then effectively becomes the fish’s tongue, growing as its host grows and feeding on particles of meat that float free as the fish eats. The biggest individual isopod recorded was 39mm (1.5in), but presumably it can grow to be as big as the fish needs its tongue to be.

      Perhaps the practice is not as gruesome as it looks, as the rose snapper can continue to feed, but no one knows whether a time comes when Cymothoa decides to let go and get a taste of blood in someone else’s mouth. Strangely, the relationship between the fish and its parasite has been observed only in the Gulf of California, or Sea of Cortez, though the fish is found in the eastern Pacific, from Mexico to Peru. It is the only known example of a parasite replacing not just a host’s organ but also its function (to hold prey) – a hard act to swallow.

NAMEkea Nestor notabilis
LOCATIONNew Zealand
ABILITYcuriosity
images

      © Tui De Roy/Minden Pictures/FLPA

      Parrots are highly inquisitive, but even among parrots, keas are exceptional. They’re native to New Zealand’s South Island, a cold, snowy, unparrotlike place where keas have to use all their wits to find a meal. While parrots elsewhere are flying from one conspicuous fruit to another, keas are searching under rocks and bark and in bushes, cones and shells for food such as roots, shoots, berries or insect larvae. This and a mountainous habitat virtually free of predators has, over 2.5 million years of evolution, made them insatiably curious. And they’re especially drawn to things they’ve never seen before. So when humans arrived in New Zealand, the keas were delivered a bonanza of new objects to investigate for food.

      Nowadays great sources of fascination are camping grounds and ski-resorts. These parrots are large and have powerful beaks, and they can rip right through a canvas tent for the sheer joy of investigation. A particular favourite is the rubber on cars – windscreen wipers mainly. One gang of keas is said to have ripped out the rubber lining around the windscreen of a tourists’ hire car, causing the glass to fall inwards and opening up the interior. When the tourists returned, they found clothes, food and car parts scattered in the snow, while the keas appeared to be playing a game of football with an empty Coke can. The birds then retreated and watched – with great curiosity, it seemed – to see what the tourists would do about it.

NAMEchimpanzee Pan troglodytes
LOCATIONforests in East, West and Central Africa
ABILITYself-medication
images

      © Steve Robinson/NHPA

      Yes, humans are the biggest drug-users. But we are not the only ones who use drugs, and we are only just beginning to discover the pharmaceutical knowledge of other animals. The current top-of-the-list user is the chimpanzee. Like us, chimps get stomach ache from time to time after overeating or consuming toxins. They also get parasites and diseases, and stressed animals usually end up feeling pretty ill.

      It’s not surprising that an intelligent primate such as a chimp, which learns by trial and error and example, should have started to use medicinal products, since their forest habitat is full of them. In Tanzania, chimps suffering from diarrhoea have been seen using the leaves of the ‘bitter leaf’ tree that local people know as a medicine for malaria, amoebic dysentery and intestinal worms. Across Africa, chimps have been seen seeking out rough-leafed plants, plucking whole leaves from them, carefully folding the leaves, rolling them around in their mouths and then swallowing them. Excreted whole, the leaves push out parasites such as intestinal worms.

      Many other animals also appear to self-medicate. Capuchin monkeys have been seen rubbing their fur with pungent plants that contain healing and insect-repellant properties. Black lemurs rub insect-killing chemicals from millipedes onto their fur. An elephant has been observed seeking out labour-inducing leaves of a tree just before giving birth. Given our increasing need for


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