Short Wave - We Hate To Tell You This, But Some Leeches Can Jump

Episode Date: July 29, 2024

Generally, we at Short Wave are open-minded to the creepies and the crawlies, but even we must admit that leeches are already the stuff of nightmares. They lurk in water. They drink blood. There are o...ver 800 different species of them. And now, as scientists have confirmed ... at least some of them can jump!Interested in more critter science? Email us at shortwave@npr.org — we'd love to consider your animal of choice for a future episode!See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. Hey, Shorewavers, Regina Barbara here. And today I'm joined by producer Hannah Chin, who's on the pod for the first time. Hi, Gina. Welcome. Thank you. They are here to grace our shortwavers with a story about leeches. And Hannah, to be honest, when I think about leeches, I think about like old-timey doctors using them to treat illnesses.
Starting point is 00:00:23 Yeah, that's a pretty common conception. There's actually this famous story about someone that you might be. be familiar with. I believe that George Washington, when he was dying, had a giant quantity of leeches, like 100, 200, maybe more leeches. I don't remember on him at the time. And that surely didn't help matters. Yeah, I don't think anybody's gotten better from having 100 or 200 leeches on that.
Starting point is 00:00:53 What? Like, I definitely know George Washington. I didn't know this story, though. Yeah. Yeah, well, that's Michael Tesler. He's an evolutionary biologist who specializes in these creepy crawlies, aka a leech expert. Okay, so other than the fact that some of them witnessed the death of our first president,
Starting point is 00:01:12 can you just run through some of the basics we know about them for me? Yeah, so there's over 800 known species of these little guys. Wow. But most of them are pretty simple when it comes down to it. A leech is a worm that feeds on blood, and they do so using, strong anti-coagulants and slurp up a whole bunch of blood and then often take a long time to digest it. Michael says that leeches are kind of like the vampire cousins of your common earthworm, you know, the kind of you see in your backyard. Wow, okay.
Starting point is 00:01:43 And most leeches, not all, drink blood. Some of them actually eat animals. What? There are non-blood feeding aquatic leeches, ones that eat invertebrate larvae. There are some that come on to land actually and eat very large earthworms. Some have frills on their side. Some phenote turtles. Some phenothfish. There's a lot of different things that aquatic leeches can and will do.
Starting point is 00:02:09 Cool. Cool. So bottom line, overall, leeches are carnivorous worms. Yeah, exactly. Wow. Michael said they range in size from a few millimeters long up to like the length of your forearm. That's horrifying. I know.
Starting point is 00:02:23 And they're almost every. Everywhere, except for like Antarctica. Most of them are in the water. They're aquatic leeches, which make up about 90% of leeches that we know exist. But there are 10% that are not aquatic. They're terrestrial, which means they live on land. Okay. And the reason that I want to tell you about them today is because conservational biologist
Starting point is 00:02:44 Maifami accidentally learned new information about them when she was working on her dissertation in Madagascar. She was collecting leeches to pop in her bag and bring back to study. when suddenly she got this idea. One afternoon, I thought it might be fun to, instead of immediately spotting a leech and putting it in a bag, to sort of sit next to it and see how it behaves and what it does, sort of to get myself acquainted with this new study species. And so that's what she did. She found a leech, and she sat down,
Starting point is 00:03:16 and she did exactly the same thing that I do when I see a cool thing in the wild. She took out her phone. I saw this leach on a leaf, and I saw. sat down next to it. I mean, as soon as I took out my phone, in under 10 seconds, that leach jumped twice. I thought, well, if it jumped that quickly, surely everyone's seen a leech jump. I really thought nothing of it, and I came back and I showed my colleagues, my lab mates. They couldn't believe what I had.
Starting point is 00:03:46 My's work, some of which she's done with Michael, is really changing what we know about terrestrial leeches and their behavior. So today on the show, leeches. They're everywhere, even on land. So what do scientists know about them? What do they still have to learn? And should we be afraid? Gina, don't fear monger. It's a genuine question that you actually scripted in for me.
Starting point is 00:04:13 Okay, blame the production team. Yep. You're listening to Shorway from NPR. Okay, so we're going to start with a kind of historical retrospective here. Like, even though land leeches are brand new to me, I guess we've known about them for, like, a long time. Yeah. Mai actually recounted a very rich history. For as long as people have been visiting places where they're found or for as long as people have lived alongside them, there are records, historical records that refer to them.
Starting point is 00:04:44 The earliest reference my and Michael found dates all the way back to the 14th century. So, quite a ways back where people have been harassed. by these leeches and talked about it in their travel journals. Certainly the people who live in terrestrial leech territory encounter them pretty regularly and are intimately familiar with their behaviors. And Mai said terrestrial leeches live in rainforests across the Indo-Pacific region. So in Madagascar, in South East Asia, even Japan, all places where people have lived for a while.
Starting point is 00:05:23 So they are descended from an aquatic ancestors. and we know that they've likely arrived where they are today by latching on to things that move and fly far distances. It's likely that they arrived in Madagascar on things like migratory birds and likely only took hold after Madagascar moved down to its current latitude. Classic leech stuff. Stick onto a bird or something. Hitchhike your way to a rainforest. We just don't actually know. need warmth, which I was surprised about. They mostly just need a lot of healthy forest canopy and a damp environment. So end up in a lush rainforest, decide it's nice. Move in. So if I were to go to one of these places, like these rainforests, what would I be looking for?
Starting point is 00:06:11 Like, what do these leeches look like? Do they look like an average, like, slug? They actually come in a surprising variety of colors and patterns, specifically the ones that tend to be found living in shrubs, in greenery. Those tend to be. and to be the more colorful variety, presumably to camouflage among the leaves. So you've got terrestrial leeches that have got these bright greens and oranges, white polka dots. Okay, I'm not going to lie, this is painting a very, like, pretty picture. There's these bright colors, lush forests, and these little baby leeches. I know, right?
Starting point is 00:06:50 The whole thing sounds pretty cute. And the terrestrial leeches are little. They're like a lot smaller than aquatic leeches. And they're more tube-shaped, whereas aquatic leeches are kind of more flattened in terms of their body plan. So aquatic leeches sort of swim in an S-curve, and terrestrial leeches seem to inchworm around and jump. And that inch-worming is also what sets them apart from worms or slugs. They move way differently. So an earthworm is sort of like a floppy piece of spaghetti, right?
Starting point is 00:07:26 Whereas a leech is essentially a tube with two suction cups, one on each end, and they use these suction cups to move. So there's one in the back, and the leech will anchor itself, sort of wave around, and then land the front sucker and then unsuck the back sucker, and in that way, sort of inchworm along. Sort of like a slinky. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, no, exactly. Like a slinky.
Starting point is 00:07:59 But Hannah, I pulled up the video you sent me, like the one that Mai took. We'll put it in the episode notes, don't worry. Yes. And leeches, they do way more than inchworm along. They jump. Right. Which, it turns out, is a big deal. Mai said this is an issue that's been debated among experts for a really long time, like hundreds of years.
Starting point is 00:08:18 You can go back to Victorian-era times when leech naturalists were coming on the scene. and a lot of them have conflicting opinions. Some of them are hardcore opposing the notion that any leech can jump at all, that it's not even possible physically for a leech to jump. And then you dig a bit deeper, and you realize that some very early explorers like Ibnabatuta from the 14th century recording, oh no, leeches jump. They jump for sure.
Starting point is 00:08:53 It seems so strange that it took scientists so long, to agree that it jumped when she found it so quickly with this video. I mentioned that, actually. She said local communities had really already known this, right? Like, they've been living alongside leeches for a really long time. They agreed that leeches jump. It's just that scientists. Like, Western scientists.
Starting point is 00:09:14 Yeah. Hadn't studied them doing so. And Michael actually weighed in here. He and Mai did work together to study the Madagascar land leech again. and release a paper confirming that, like, terrestrial leeches jump. The rest of leech biologists essentially said, no. This can't be, it's extremely unlikely, if not impossible. Some were willing to concede that maybe leeches that climbed up things would detach their suckers and essentially fall down.
Starting point is 00:09:47 But leeches are not weak animals. They're muscular, and they very much, in this case, are using those muscles. I think for both Maya and for me, the video is so obvious. It's so clear what's happening. There's a leach jumps, right? It's like, yeah, that leach jumps. People's nightmares are true. People's nightmares are true.
Starting point is 00:10:08 Yeah. And, I mean, it does kind of feel like the scientific community should have figured this out sooner. But Michael and Mai said there's a lot about terrestrial leeches that we still don't know. Most invertebrates are painfully understudied. Leaches actually get more attention than most because people get grossed out by them, and they're scared. There's so much mystery, you know, so much we don't yet understand about why they do what they do in terms of their feeding behavior, the way they move, how long they survive, you know, what they're capable of doing or transmitting or teaching us. There's just so many unanswered questions still. And here's the thing, Gina.
Starting point is 00:10:51 researchers like Mai and Michael are worried that we might never answer those questions if we don't start seriously addressing climate change. Old pristine rainforests are unfortunately disappearing globally. They're taking leeches with them. And as we've discussed, we know so little about them, including their diversity overall, their behaviors, their inclinations. That's part of the biodiversity crisis that we're living through and the effects of climate change that we're witnessing.
Starting point is 00:11:21 we're losing what we don't know we have. Researchers estimate that we lost 3.7 million hectares of tropical rainforest last year. That's like 10 soccer fields every minute, which is huge on its own, right? Like these forests are important for sucking up and storing carbon dioxide, which otherwise gets released as a greenhouse gas and worsens climate change, right? We don't need that. No, that's so horrifying. But it also means that we could lose all the biodiversity that comes with that forest.
Starting point is 00:11:51 Rainforest are home to half the living animal and plant species in the world. And we might never get to learn about those species or how they support the local ecosystem or how they could be helpful to humans for our human-centric listeners all there. Like me. Like you. Hannah, thank you so much for making me care about legions. I mean, this has been a really fun yet very bloody story. And also, welcome to the podcast.
Starting point is 00:12:17 Thank you so much, Gina. This is a lot of fun. This episode was produced and fact-checked by Hannah Chin. It was edited by showrunner Rebecca Ramirez and the audio engineer was Maggie Luthor. Beth Donovan is our senior director and Colin Campbell is our senior vice president of podcasting strategy. I'm Regina Barber. Thank you for listening to Shortwave from NPR.

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