It’s no secret that most animals release waste through their backsides,
but some use that exit for more than releasing leftover food. Sea
cucumbers use their rear end for at least five different functions –
including breathing.
Sea cucumbers are echinoderms, a group that includes sea urchins and
starfish, but sea cucumbers’ tube-like bodies look quite different.
Inside their bodies are long respiratory trees, similar to human lungs,
that come together just inside the anus. Muscles near the anus pump
water in and out of the sea cucumber’s body to the respiratory trees.
Some sea cucumber species pull in up to four cups of water every hour.
The respiratory trees remove oxygen from the water, which is then
distributed using hemoglobin, the same oxygencarrying protein found in
many other animals but in no other echinoderms.
But the sea
cucumber’s anus does much more than “breathe.” It also releases sperm
and eggs for reproduction and offers the sea cucumber an interesting
defense mechanism. When threatened, sea cucumbers shoot long, sticky
threads out their anus that trap the potential predator. Some species
take this ejection a step further: they eviscerate themselves, expelling
their respiratory tree and digestive organs. But it’s no big loss for
the sea cucumber. Just as starfish can regrow their rays, sea cucumbers
can regrow their internal organs.
Recent research reveals that sea
cucumbers may also extract nutrients from the water pumped through
their anus. But the theory that sea cucumbers can “eat” through their
anus is still new and needs more research. Either way, sea cucumbers’
rear ends are already doing five times the work of our own.
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