{"id":170076,"date":"2023-01-25T07:16:45","date_gmt":"2023-01-25T07:16:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/?p=170076"},"modified":"2023-01-25T07:16:45","modified_gmt":"2023-01-25T07:16:45","slug":"scientists-discover-sea-beasts-that-can-regrow-anuses-and-sex-organs","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/world-news\/scientists-discover-sea-beasts-that-can-regrow-anuses-and-sex-organs\/","title":{"rendered":"Scientists discover sea beasts that can regrow anuses and sex organs"},"content":{"rendered":"

Scientists were stunned as they discovered sea spiders have the ability to grow new sex organs as well as an anus.<\/p>\n

While experts were already aware that arthropods can regrow legs, a new study has found the creatures surprisingly possess regenerative powers which extend to their entire bottom halves.<\/p>\n

Professor Gerhard Scholtz, the lead researcher behind the breakthrough, said: "Nobody had expected this".<\/p>\n

READ MORE: Bloke 'freaked out' after dog sniffs out body of mystery 'alien creature' on UK beach<\/b><\/p>\n

Various arthropods, which are invertebrates with no internal skeleton or backbone, are capable of re-growing legs such as the likes of centipedes and crabs.<\/p>\n

Scholtz spoke to Sky News in more detail about the discovery his team has made.<\/p>\n

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He said: "If you look at the animal kingdom, the capability of regeneration differs very much in various groups of animals.<\/p>\n

"Flatworms, for example, can regenerate their whole body from a limited amount of tissue, on the other hand, us \u2013 mammals \u2013 cannot regenerate much \u2013 liver, tissue, skin, but apart from that very little.<\/p>\n

"For arthropods \u2013 crustaceans, insects, myriapods, and types of spider \u2013 it was entirely unknown that they could regenerate body parts other than limbs."<\/p>\n

The study has since been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal, and saw the hind limbs and backends of 23 sea spiders amputated, with 16 of them regenerating at least one lost body part.<\/p>\n

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Professor Scholtz, of Humboldt University of Berlin's Institute for Biology, said the findings should encourage further research into the space.<\/p>\n

He said: "One has to look to other arthropods and whether they can do the same."<\/p>\n

Scholtz is already planning further research by reproducing his study with insects and crabs with further hopes that the research could become an option for human treatment, especially amputees.<\/p>\n

"I don't think the sea spiders will play a crucial role, but who knows? The more you know about regeneration in the animal kingdom, the better you might be able to use it for medical treatment."<\/p>\n

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