1 00:00:02,040 --> 00:00:07,040 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff from how Stuff Works, Hey, brain Stuff, 2 00:00:07,120 --> 00:00:11,319 Speaker 1: Lauren Vogel bomb here. Unsurprisingly, a human doesn't have much 3 00:00:11,360 --> 00:00:15,480 Speaker 1: in common with a sea spider. Actually, no other organism 4 00:00:15,480 --> 00:00:17,320 Speaker 1: on Earth has much in common with one of these 5 00:00:17,520 --> 00:00:20,400 Speaker 1: spindle legged arthropods that look more like a tinker toy 6 00:00:20,440 --> 00:00:24,480 Speaker 1: experiment than a living thing. My favorite top five weird 7 00:00:24,560 --> 00:00:27,800 Speaker 1: things about them. Their hearts are so weak that they 8 00:00:27,840 --> 00:00:31,840 Speaker 1: require the digestive system to move blood around their body. 9 00:00:32,240 --> 00:00:35,159 Speaker 1: Most of their digestive system and their genitals are encased 10 00:00:35,200 --> 00:00:39,240 Speaker 1: in their delicate legs. Their males carry their young, They 11 00:00:39,280 --> 00:00:42,440 Speaker 1: eat by sticking their probiscus into a mushy sea creature 12 00:00:42,520 --> 00:00:46,920 Speaker 1: and sucking out its juices, and until recently, nobody could 13 00:00:46,920 --> 00:00:50,800 Speaker 1: figure out how they breathed. Strange as they may be, 14 00:00:51,080 --> 00:00:54,600 Speaker 1: sea spiders occupy marine habitats the world over. In deep 15 00:00:54,640 --> 00:00:57,680 Speaker 1: and shallow waters. They can be miniscule, with a leg 16 00:00:57,760 --> 00:01:01,000 Speaker 1: span of only a millimeter, but antarct sea spiders grow 17 00:01:01,040 --> 00:01:03,840 Speaker 1: to be unusually large, about the size of a frisbee. 18 00:01:04,280 --> 00:01:07,320 Speaker 1: Polar gigantism is the term that describes the way animals 19 00:01:07,319 --> 00:01:09,759 Speaker 1: at our planets poles tend to grow much larger than 20 00:01:09,800 --> 00:01:12,560 Speaker 1: in other parts of the world. Even at their biggest 21 00:01:12,600 --> 00:01:14,959 Speaker 1: This isn't to say that their bodies are very big. 22 00:01:15,240 --> 00:01:18,759 Speaker 1: Their trunks are improbably small in contrast to the sheer 23 00:01:18,800 --> 00:01:21,800 Speaker 1: area their legs take up. There's not a lot of 24 00:01:21,840 --> 00:01:24,600 Speaker 1: surface area on a sea spiders abdomen and thorax. To 25 00:01:24,920 --> 00:01:27,920 Speaker 1: trick it out with unnecessary amenities. A lot of jobs 26 00:01:27,920 --> 00:01:30,080 Speaker 1: have to be farmed out to those long, skinny legs. 27 00:01:30,680 --> 00:01:33,399 Speaker 1: Scientists have pretty much identified how they pack most of 28 00:01:33,400 --> 00:01:37,040 Speaker 1: the necessary physiological processes into such a teen c body 29 00:01:37,280 --> 00:01:40,520 Speaker 1: and such delicate appendages, but they haven't been able to 30 00:01:40,560 --> 00:01:44,800 Speaker 1: figure out how they breathe until recently. A study published 31 00:01:44,800 --> 00:01:47,520 Speaker 1: in a twenty eighteen issue of the Journal of Experimental 32 00:01:47,560 --> 00:01:50,680 Speaker 1: Biology has gotten to the bottom of how sea spiders 33 00:01:50,720 --> 00:01:54,080 Speaker 1: move oxygen through their bodies by studying several species of 34 00:01:54,120 --> 00:01:58,160 Speaker 1: giant Antarctic sea spiders. Most sea creatures have gills like 35 00:01:58,240 --> 00:02:01,080 Speaker 1: fish and lobsters, or lungs like ales, and some can 36 00:02:01,160 --> 00:02:04,360 Speaker 1: even take oxygen in through their skin. But sea spiders 37 00:02:04,400 --> 00:02:07,160 Speaker 1: have a tough exo skeleton and no gills or lungs, 38 00:02:07,200 --> 00:02:11,200 Speaker 1: so what gives The research team found sea spiders take 39 00:02:11,240 --> 00:02:14,680 Speaker 1: oxygen into their bodies through hundreds of tiny pores in 40 00:02:14,720 --> 00:02:17,720 Speaker 1: their cuticle. That's the tough outer skin that gives them 41 00:02:17,720 --> 00:02:21,760 Speaker 1: structure and protection. They put giant Antarctic sea spiders in 42 00:02:21,840 --> 00:02:25,640 Speaker 1: respiration tanks to see exactly how much oxygen they were absorbing, 43 00:02:25,960 --> 00:02:27,679 Speaker 1: and they found that they were taking in enough through 44 00:02:27,720 --> 00:02:30,960 Speaker 1: tiny holes all over their legs to run their entire bodies, 45 00:02:31,840 --> 00:02:34,720 Speaker 1: which of course is great for the sea spider for now, 46 00:02:35,040 --> 00:02:37,400 Speaker 1: but as polar seas warm as a result of global 47 00:02:37,400 --> 00:02:40,720 Speaker 1: climate change, their ability to absorb oxygen in this novel 48 00:02:40,760 --> 00:02:49,000 Speaker 1: way might be compromised. Today's episode was written by Jescelin 49 00:02:49,040 --> 00:02:51,760 Speaker 1: Shields and produced by Tyler Clang. For more on this 50 00:02:51,840 --> 00:02:54,840 Speaker 1: and lots of other precarious topics, visit our home planet, 51 00:02:55,000 --> 00:03:07,519 Speaker 1: how stuff Works dot com