Deep sleep: Even jellyfish need their
slumber
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[September 25, 2017]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Even a jellyfish -
one of Earth's first and most ancient animals - needs its sleep.
Scientists said on Thursday they have demonstrated that a primitive type
of jellyfish called Cassiopea goes to sleep nightly. While sleep has
been confirmed in other invertebrates such as worms and fruit flies, the
jellyfish is the most evolutionarily ancient animal that has been shown
to slumber.
"These results suggest that even those animals that lack a centralized
nervous system require sleep, which means that sleep is one of the most
ancient behavioral states, deeply rooted within the animal lineage,"
California Institute of Technology biologist Ravi Nath said.
Jellyfish have thrived in the seas for at least 600 million years,
longer than nearly any other animal. By comparison, dinosaurs appeared
roughly 230 million years ago and humans appeared roughly 300,000 years
ago. The findings involving such a primordial creature raise fresh
questions about sleep's origin and purpose.
"We do not know if sleep is limited to just animals," said Nath, who
helped lead the study published in the journal Current Biology.
"Sleep is a genetically encoded behavioral state. Genes and neural
circuits interact to generate the sleep state," Nath added. "I think it
would be hard to demonstrate a sleep state in an organism that is not an
animal, but I think the sleep state that we know may have been co-opted
from periods of quiescence in organisms as diverse as plants, bacteria
and fungi."
Jellyfish are among the first animals to have developed neurons - nerve
cells - though they lack a brain, spine or central nervous system.
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A primitive type of jellyfish called Cassiopea, which goes to sleep
nightly, is seen on the floor of their tank at Caltech in Pasadena,
California, U.S. in this image released on September 20, 2017.
Courtesy Caltech/Handout via REUTERS
Cassiopea jellyfish live in clear, shallow, tropical waters of the
Pacific and western Atlantic oceans, eating plankton. Measuring
about 1-2 inches (2.5-5 cm) in diameter, they are dubbed the
"upside-down jellyfish" because they lie on the seafloor inverted in
the water with their tentacles upward.
Through lab experiments, the researchers determined Cassiopea met
three important sleep criteria: periods of decreased activity known
as behavioral quiescence; a decreased response to stimuli; and an
increased sleep drive after being sleep deprived.
The jellyfish were found to display periods of inactivity at night,
pulsing their bodies 30 percent less often than during daytime. When
a platform underneath them was removed, they took up to 5 seconds to
"wake up" and reorient themselves. And when deprived of nighttime
sleep by being nudged with a squirt of water, they became more
likely to sleep during the day.
The researchers did not examine whether jellyfish dream.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2fElMrT Current Biology, online September 21,
2017.
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