1 00:00:01,920 --> 00:00:07,160 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff production of iHeart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, 2 00:00:07,200 --> 00:00:12,840 Speaker 1: Lauren bog Obam Here. Slugs are cool, really. These diverse 3 00:00:12,880 --> 00:00:15,720 Speaker 1: members of the class gastropoduct can boast all kinds of 4 00:00:15,760 --> 00:00:19,600 Speaker 1: superpowers depending on their species, from safely dropping their tails 5 00:00:19,600 --> 00:00:23,840 Speaker 1: when attacked to creating slimes strong enough to dangle from. 6 00:00:23,880 --> 00:00:26,680 Speaker 1: But a green sea slug that floats around in the 7 00:00:26,720 --> 00:00:30,160 Speaker 1: intertidal zone along the northeast coast of America has wowed 8 00:00:30,200 --> 00:00:34,280 Speaker 1: scientists with this ability. It can suck out an algae's 9 00:00:34,360 --> 00:00:38,320 Speaker 1: parts that generate energy from sunlight and incorporate those parts 10 00:00:38,360 --> 00:00:41,640 Speaker 1: into its own biology. In doing so, it becomes an 11 00:00:41,680 --> 00:00:46,120 Speaker 1: animal with the photosynthetic ability of a plant. But we 12 00:00:46,159 --> 00:00:50,959 Speaker 1: spoke with Debussies Bacharia, a biochemist and microbiologist at Rutgers University, 13 00:00:51,040 --> 00:00:53,960 Speaker 1: New Brunswick and senior author of a paper appearing in 14 00:00:54,000 --> 00:00:58,600 Speaker 1: Molecular Biology and Evolution about the sea slug. These slugs 15 00:00:58,640 --> 00:01:03,000 Speaker 1: look like wide blaant green leaves with snail like heads. 16 00:01:03,040 --> 00:01:05,520 Speaker 1: They're found in the shallow inlets and salt marshes along 17 00:01:05,520 --> 00:01:08,679 Speaker 1: the Atlantic coast of North America from Florida to Nova Scotia, 18 00:01:09,040 --> 00:01:11,400 Speaker 1: and they have a life span of eight to ten months. 19 00:01:12,200 --> 00:01:16,200 Speaker 1: But Charia said this slug is really unique. It steals 20 00:01:16,240 --> 00:01:19,600 Speaker 1: the algae's plastids and then directs them without the help 21 00:01:19,640 --> 00:01:24,840 Speaker 1: of the algile nucleus. Other animals, including some corals and salamanders, 22 00:01:25,080 --> 00:01:28,120 Speaker 1: are known to incorporate algae to benefit from the algae's 23 00:01:28,120 --> 00:01:32,280 Speaker 1: ability to photosynthesize. What makes this slug unique is it 24 00:01:32,319 --> 00:01:35,640 Speaker 1: takes only the plastids or the very organelles that contain 25 00:01:35,720 --> 00:01:39,760 Speaker 1: chlorophyll and performed photosynthesis. The slug then uses its own 26 00:01:39,800 --> 00:01:42,919 Speaker 1: genome to keep the plastids operating within its own body 27 00:01:43,200 --> 00:01:46,920 Speaker 1: throughout the rest of its life. Figuring out how the 28 00:01:46,959 --> 00:01:50,560 Speaker 1: slug keeps these algae made solar panels functioning could lead 29 00:01:50,600 --> 00:01:54,200 Speaker 1: to innovations and developing green machines that need only sunlight 30 00:01:54,240 --> 00:01:57,960 Speaker 1: to generate energy, or bioproducts that could be used as biodiesel. 31 00:01:59,120 --> 00:02:01,880 Speaker 1: As a juvenile, one of these slugs will suck in 32 00:02:01,920 --> 00:02:05,680 Speaker 1: a particular species of brown algae. The structure of this 33 00:02:05,760 --> 00:02:08,880 Speaker 1: brown algae lends itself to efficient sucking since it has 34 00:02:08,919 --> 00:02:12,400 Speaker 1: no walls between the cells in its body. The slug 35 00:02:12,440 --> 00:02:16,400 Speaker 1: then digests the algae's nuclei, but stows the algae's plastids 36 00:02:16,400 --> 00:02:19,280 Speaker 1: in the lining of its gut. But once the slug 37 00:02:19,360 --> 00:02:22,680 Speaker 1: has thus ingested the algae's solar panels, it survives off 38 00:02:22,680 --> 00:02:25,200 Speaker 1: a photosynthesis for the remaining six to eight months of 39 00:02:25,200 --> 00:02:29,440 Speaker 1: its life. But a Charia said, the only reason the 40 00:02:29,480 --> 00:02:32,440 Speaker 1: plastid stop working is the c slug completes its life 41 00:02:32,440 --> 00:02:35,919 Speaker 1: cycle and dies. That suggests that the plastids could be 42 00:02:36,000 --> 00:02:39,480 Speaker 1: kept functioning for a long time. If this slug's ability 43 00:02:39,520 --> 00:02:42,000 Speaker 1: could be engineered, you could build a green machine that 44 00:02:42,120 --> 00:02:50,560 Speaker 1: runs indefinitely. Today's episode was written by Amanda Onion and 45 00:02:50,560 --> 00:02:53,280 Speaker 1: produced by Tyler clayg. Brain Stuff is production of I 46 00:02:53,360 --> 00:02:55,400 Speaker 1: Heart Radio's How Stuff Works. For more in this and 47 00:02:55,480 --> 00:02:58,120 Speaker 1: lots of other long functioning topics, visit our home planet 48 00:02:58,160 --> 00:03:00,840 Speaker 1: has Stuff Works dot com and more podcasts from my 49 00:03:00,880 --> 00:03:03,639 Speaker 1: heart Radio see i Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or 50 00:03:03,680 --> 00:03:16,519 Speaker 1: wherever you listen to your favorite shows. H