Archive for October 6, 2008

Big Cats

Liger Photo

The liger is a cat born from the breeding of a male lion and a female tiger. This combination produces an offspring with more lionistic features than if the reverse pairing had occured. That would produce a more tigeristic creature known as a tigon. Both are members of genus Panthera.There is no scientific name assigned to this animal because of it’s human assisted ancestory.

 

 

The large size of the liger and small size of the tigon is due to “genomic imprinting” – the unequal expression of genes depending on parent of origin i.e. whether certain growth genes are inherited from the male or the female. This is linked to the species’ lifestyle and breeding strategy – whether the female mates with only one male while in heat (non-competitive) or whether she mates with many males (competitive). This results in “growth dysplasia”. The following explanation is greatly simplified as a number of other genes are contributed unequally by the male and female parents and also affect the general health and longevity of the offspring. Lions live in prides led by several adult males. The lionesses mate with each of those males. Each male wants his offspring to be the ones to survive, but the female’s genes want multiple offspring to survive. The father’s genes promote size of the offspring to ensure that his offspring out-compete any other offspring in the womb at the same time. Genes from the female inhibit growth to ensure that as many offspring as possible survive and that they all have an equal chance. By contrast, tigers are largely solitary and a female on heat normally only mates with one male. There is no competition for space in the womb so the male tiger’s genes do not need to promote larger offspring. There is therefore no need for the female to compensate, so the offspring’s growth goes uninhibited.

When a male tiger mates with a lioness, his genes are not promoting large growth of the offspring because he is adapted to a non-competitive breeding strategy. However, the lioness is adapted to a competitive strategy and her genes inhibit the growth of the offspring. This uneven match means that the offspring (tigons) are often smaller and less robust than either parent.

When a male lion mates with a tigress, his genes promote large offspring because lions are adapted to a competitive breeding strategy. The tigress does not inhibit the growth because she is adapted to a non-competitive strategy. Therefore the offspring (liger) grows larger and stronger than either parent because the effects do not cancel each other out. Ligers take several years to reach full adult size, but it is a myth that ligers never stop growing.

Growth dysplasia has other effects: the size of the placenta may be affected (causing miscarriage), the embryo may be aborted at an early stage due to abnormal growth, the cub may be stillborn or may only survive a few days. In some rodents, mating Species A males with Species B females produces offspring half normal size, but mating Species B males with Species A females cause the offspring to be aborted as they try to grow to several times the normal size.

Because of the impossibility of a gene being inherited from only females, there is a competing hypothesis. This hypothesis (allthough not tested) is that the Lion’s sperm is damaged somehow during fertilization and that a growth inhibiting gene is typically destroyed. It is impossible for a gene carried on a chromosomes to be passed along only from the mother. The reason for this is there are no chromosomes that only a female can have. Female Tigons and Female Ligers both possess a tiger X chromosme and a lion X chromosome, yet only the female Ligers will grow large, this means something must happen to either alter the genes or that the cause of the growth dysplasia lies at least partially outside of the genes.

Another possible hypothesis is that the growth dysplasia results from the interaction between lion genes and tiger womb enviroment. The tiger produces a hormone that sets the fetal Liger on a pattern of growth that does not end throughout his life. The hormonal hypothesis is that the cause of the male Liger’s growth is his sterility – essentially, the male liger remains in the pre-pubertal growth phase. This is not upheld by behavioural evidence – despite being sterile, many male ligers become sexually mature and mate with females. In addition, female ligers also attain great size but are fertile.

Liger

 

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Two heads not always better than one.

... X-ray of the two headed snake.

The two headed snake. Not as rare as some may think. They have been found in several countries and live in serveral zoos and research centers. It is difficult for them to live in the wild because of there decision making problems. They tend to fight over food and when aproached die from hesitation from one head wanting to go one way and the other another.

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This snake lives at the Sandiego Zoo.

Two-headed snakes do exist, but they are rare. Two-headed snakes are actually conjoined twins, or sometimes, a fully formed individual with a parasitic twin that only consists of a head. Though two-headed snakes are a rarity, they are more common than other animals with two heads and are sometimes on display at zoos or in traveling animal side shows. Some museums have preserved specimens of two-headed snakes.

Two-headed snakes do not have a long life expectancy, particularly in the wild. Each head has a brain and, usually, some control over the shared body, and the two cannot communicate with each other. Movement is therefore difficult, as each head may try to travel in a different direction, and in the worst case scenario, the heads may fight or try to eat each other.

Some two-headed snakes share a stomach, while others have a stomach for each head. In a two-headed snake with separate stomachs, one of the heads may die if it routinely loses fights over food. Even if there is only one stomach, two-headed snakes may not be able to capture prey if the heads are competing for food.

Despite these difficulties, two-headed snakes have been known to live up to 20 years in captivity. Thelma and Louise, a two-headed snake that lived at the San Diego Zoo in California, had 15 offspring during her lifetime. Researchers have theorized that the inbreeding of snakes for zoos and pets may lead to an increased incidence of two-headed snakes, but this is very difficult, if not impossible, to verify, as it would entail getting an idea of how often two-headed snakes are born in the wild. The fact that they would not live very long makes the task even more daunting.

In 2000, a two-headed snake named We earned a bid of $150,000 US dollars (USD) on eBay, but the site’s policy against the auction of live animals prevented the sale. Instead, Nutra Pharma Corporation adopted the snake in 2006 to aid in their study of the pharmacological benefits of snake venom.

 

How does science explain the anamoly?  
The condition of having more than one head is known as Polycephaly.

Though mythological stories have characters with multiple heads (Ravana had ten heads!), in the real world, bicephalic— or two headed animals— are the only type of Polycephalic creatures that exist.

Two-headed snakes and other animals typically occur in the same way that Siamese twins do. A developing embryo begins to split into identical twins but then stops part way, leaving the twins joined.

The point at which the embryo stops separating varies. Just as Siamese twins can be joined at the head, breast, or hip, so too can snakes be joined at varying places on their bodies.

In the wild, polycephalic animals usually do not survive very long. Since each head of the animal has its own brain, the animal often move in a disoriented and dizzy fashion, with the brains ‘arguing’ with each other. Some animals simply zig-zag, without getting anywhere. 

Since they have a great deal of difficulty deciding which direction to go, they cannot catch a prey. Nor can they respond fast enough to escape from a predator.

Even in captivity, there are problems. Snakes operate a good deal by smell, and if one head catches the scent of prey on the other’s head, it will attack and try to swallow the second head!

Two-Headed Snake. That is awesome!

The World Aquarium at St Louis, Missouri, USA, recently lost one of its main attractions. The 8-year-old, albino, two headed snake named ‘We’, which was one of the museum’s big attractions died in June, of natural causes. 

The snake was an inch thick and 4 feet long. Its body was white and the heads had a reddish appearance. Officials at the aquarium said that a taxidermist was preserving We’s body.

Scores of visitors who have been making a trip to the aquarium mainly to see the two-headed snake would now have to be satisfied with  the display of ‘We’ as a preserved specimen.

 
 

The aquarium had purchased the snake for $15,000 just after she was born. ‘We’ survived because, unlike some two-headed animals, both mouths in this case were connected to the same stomach. Interestingly, the snake had both male and female genitalia. Last year the aquarium tried to auction off the rare reptile to raise money for research and conservation programs, and was hoping to get $150,000. But the sale was later withdrawn on legal grounds.

‘We’, though an interesting rarity, was not one of its kind. Late last year, scientists have found what is thought to be the first example of a two-headed reptile in the fossil record.

The abnormal animal, belonging to a group of aquatic reptiles, was unearthed in northeastern China and dates to the time of the dinosaurs.

Two-headed snakes have regularly been cited and captured in many parts of the world. There are also recorded existence of a two headed sheep, pig, dog, cat and even a bird. But apart from conjoined twins, the most commonly observed two-headed animals are tortoises and snakes.

Two Headed Snake

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