Updated
Updated · Nautilus · Jun 10
Cell Study Finds Deep-Sea Isopods Survive 5 Years Without Food
Updated
Updated · Nautilus · Jun 10

Cell Study Finds Deep-Sea Isopods Survive 5 Years Without Food

3 articles · Updated · Nautilus · Jun 10

Summary

  • Supergiant deep-sea isopods can go as long as five years without eating, according to a Cell paper that links the feat to extreme energy conservation.
  • Two Bathynomus species from about 990 feet and 3,000 feet deep showed profoundly depressed metabolisms, with the deeper-dwelling B. jamesi larger and better equipped to store energy.
  • Genome and gut analyses suggest the animals cope by eating heavily when food appears, then stretching reserves through enlarged digestive capacity, expanded metabolism-related gene groups and a microbiome that supports fat storage.
  • Researchers also found a bacteria-derived ND1 gene tied to suppressing energy use in cold conditions, offering a broader model for how life balances growth and survival in extreme deep-sea environments.

Insights

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