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szdaily -> Kaleidoscope -> 
The science of zombies: Will the undead rise?
    2019-11-04  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

HORDES of brain-munching undead terrorizing neighborhoods make for fun television and movies, but zombies could never be real ... or could they?

There are in fact a growing number of documented examples in the animal kingdom of parasites that change their hosts’ behavior — and increasing evidence that humans are not immune to zombie-like manipulations.

It’s a subject that fascinates theoretical evolutionary biologist Athena Aktipis of Arizona State University, who hosts a podcast called “Zombified” that applies real world science to the types of apocalyptic stories first popularized by filmmaker George Romero in the 1960s and are now a staple horror genre.

“More than half of the species that we know on Earth are parasites,” Aktipis said.

One example is the Ophiocordyceps fungus, which releases spores that infect the carpenter ant’s body, allowing it to take over the insect’s locomotive activity.

Eventually, it kills its host by forcing it to leave its nest and bite down on a piece of vegetation which it gets stuck to as a result of a tetanus-like infection that gives it lockjaw.

The parasitic fungus erupts out of its host’s head with a mushroom-like growth called a stroma. At night, when uninfected ants are out foraging, this growth shoots out more infectious spores and the 2-3 week cycle repeats itself.

“We’re totally convinced that the behaviors that the ant show are all to benefit the fungus,” said Charissa de Bekker, an assistant professor of biology at the University of Central Florida who is carrying out genetic research to better understand the takeover process.

Another example among insects comes from two different wasp species, the crypt gall wasp and the parasitoid crypt-keeper wasp.

Kelly Weinersmith, a biology professor at Rice University who was part of the team that made the discovery, said that a healthy crypt gall wasp matures inside a compartment formed in an oak tree called a “crypt.” Eventually the larva grows up and chews its way out of the tree.

But when the parasitoid finds crypt gall wasp larvae, it lays its own egg in the crypt, and the parasite manipulates the host into chewing a hole that is too small to escape from — such that it can only stick its head out.

“After they get trapped there, the parasitoid eats (the crypt gall wasp’s) insides,” Weinersmith said.

“When the parasitoid is done developing, it chews a hole in the head of the host and emerges through its head, it’s all super creepy.”

If you think nothing like that could ever happen to humans, think again.

The single-celled parasite Toxoplasma gondii may have infected around 40 million Americans, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The parasite “somehow evolved to make a rat get turned on by the smell of cat urine, so it goes up to a cat and snuggles with it, and then it gets eaten which completes the life cycle of the toxoplasma — if that’s not zombification then what is?” said Aktipis.

People can get infected by eating undercooked meat — or through their pet cats, especially when cleaning out their litter boxes.

Some studies have reported an association between brain infection of the parasite and personality traits such as risk-taking and aggression, though other research has disputed these findings.

Rabies, likewise, makes animals and people aggressive, and in some cases makes humans extremely sexually aroused.

(SD-Agencies)

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