When Two Sea Aliens Become One | The New York Times

Two individual comb jellies (Mnemiopsis leidyi) can rapidly rapidly fuse into a single entity in which some physiological functions are integrated. Credit: A. Moss

Note: This New York Times article (and others listed below) reports on research from the 2023 Grass Lab at MBL. The study was led by Kavli-Grass Fellow Kei Jokura in collaboration with Fellows Tommi Anttonen and Mariana Rodriguez-Santiago, and Grass Lab Associate Director Oscar Arenas Sabogal.

Primitive animals called comb jellies can fuse their bodies and nervous systems together.

Comb jellies, the delicate bells that pulse their iridescent bodies through the ocean, are some of the strangest creatures on earth. “They are the aliens of the sea,” said Leonid Moroz, a neuroscientist at the Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience in St. Augustine, Fla.

The aliens belong to the oldest branch of the animal family tree. They split from the ancestors of all other living animals about 700 million years ago and have traveled down their own odd evolutionary path ever since. Studies by Dr. Moroz and others suggest that comb jellies evolved their own nervous system, as well as their own muscles and digestive tract — complete with two anuses.

But a study published on Monday makes clear that scientists have barely begun to understand the creatures’ bizarre biology. Researchers found that a pair of unrelated comb jellies can spontaneously fuse together into a single body. This surprising ability is not only raising more questions about these ancient animals, but also giving clues about the evolution of our own immune system.

“It opens a Pandora’s box — a good Pandora’s box,” said Dr. Moroz, who was not involved in the research.

The box was accidentally opened by Kei Jokura, a biologist who studies comb jellies, also known as ctenophores. Last summer, Dr. Jokura traveled to the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass., to study how comb jellies use light to navigate. Read rest of the story here.

Source: When Two Sea Aliens Become One | The New York Times

Other media coverage for this study includes:

Two Sea Creatures Fused Into a Single Animal | The Wall Street Journal

This Jelly is Really Two in One | Science

These Sea Creatures Can Fuse Their Bodies | Science News

'Franken-Jelly" with Two Butts is Actually Two Individuals Fused Together | Scientific American

These Frankenstein-Like Sea Creatures Can Actually Fuse Their Bodies Together | The Smithsonian Magazine