Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-11-2021
Published In
Physical Biology
Abstract
Asexual freshwater planarians reproduce by transverse bisection (binary fission) into two pieces. This process produces a head and a tail, which fully regenerate within 1–2 weeks. How planarians split into two offspring—using only their musculature and substrate traction—is a challenging biomechanics problem. We found that three different species, Dugesia japonica, Girardia tigrina and Schmidtea mediterranea, have evolved three different mechanical solutions to self-bisect. Using time lapse imaging of the fission process, we quantitatively characterize the main steps of division in the three species and extract the distinct and shared key features. Across the three species, planarians actively alter their body shape, regulate substrate traction, and use their muscles to generate tensile stresses large enough to overcome the ultimate tensile strength of the tissue. Moreover, we show that how each planarian species divides dictates how resources are split among its offspring. This ultimately determines offspring survival and reproductive success. Thus, heterospecific differences in the mechanics of self-bisection of individual worms explain the observed differences in the population reproductive strategies of different planarian species.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.
Recommended Citation
T. Goel; Danielle Ireland; Vir Shetty , '22; Christina Rabeler; P. H. Diamond; and Eva-Maria S. Collins.
(2021).
"Let It Rip: The Mechanics Of Self-Bisection In Asexual Planarians Determines Their Population Reproductive Strategies".
Physical Biology.
Volume 19,
Issue 1.
DOI: 10.1088/1478-3975/ac2f29
https://works.swarthmore.edu/fac-biology/673
Comments
This work is a preprint that is freely available under a Creative Commons license courtesy of IOP Publishing.