Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 3
Cymothoa exigua Replaces Fish Tongues After Eating Them, One of About 100 Mouth-Attaching Isopods
Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 3

Cymothoa exigua Replaces Fish Tongues After Eating Them, One of About 100 Mouth-Attaching Isopods

1 articles · Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 3

Summary

  • Cymothoa exigua enters a fish through the gills, drains the tongue’s blood supply over weeks, then clamps onto the remaining bone and serves as a working stand-in.
  • The parasite can do that because a fish tongue is largely a hard bony pad, not a muscular organ like a human tongue, letting the host keep eating, breathing and swimming.
  • Researchers call it the only known case of an animal destroying a host organ and functionally replacing it, though some biologists argue the bony base usually remains and the swap is only partial.
  • The isopod lives mainly in the Gulf of California and nearby eastern Pacific waters, often in snappers, and belongs to a broader group of roughly 100 mouth-attaching cymothoid species worldwide.

Insights

What happens to a fish if its parasite 'tongue' dies before the host does?
As oceans warm, could this tongue-eating parasite conquer new territories and hosts?
Could this organ-swapping parasite inspire living medical implants for humans?