Cuttlefish Look Like Squid—and Like Crabs, and Like Algae, and Like Rocks | Nat Geo Wild

submitted by Huzzaz on 02/20/18 1

A new study examines the muscles, nerves, and chemicals that enable cuttlefish—animals related to squid—to change their skin texture, mimicking another animal or their surroundings. ➡ Subscribe: bit.ly/NatGeoWILDSubscribe About Nat Geo Wild: Welcome to a place so wild, anything can happen. Nat Geo Wild is the network all about animals from National Geographic, where every story is an adventure and your imagination is allowed to run wild. Get More Nat Geo Wild: Official Site: bit.ly/NatGeoWILD Facebook: bit.ly/NGWFacebook Twitter: bit.ly/NGWTwitter Instagram: bit.ly/NGWInstagram When little bumps all over their skin, called papillae, stick out, two kinds of muscles are involved in the display. One kind, striated muscles—like skeletal muscles, such as your biceps—help the cuttlefish raise the spiny nubs fast. Another kind, which are similar to the smooth muscles in your gut, seem to allow the bumps to stay up for as long as an hour without using much energy. Gonzales-Bellido and her collaborators also discovered that the a secondary nerve bundle, not the brain, controls the muscles, which hints at a deep evolutionary connection to a similar neural circuit in squid. Read the related article "Cuttlefish Pretend to be Crabs to Catch More Fish." news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/06/cuttlefish-mimics-hermit-crabs-catch-fish/ Cuttlefish Look Like Squid—and Like Crabs, and Like Algae, and Like Rocks | Nat Geo Wild youtu.be/qFEV4K9hUq8 Nat Geo Wild www.youtube.com/user/NatGeoWild

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