The Denver Post

You can’t escape lice, even 6,500 feet below the ocean

- By Priyanka Runwal

Darling, it’s better under the sea, unless you’re an insect. You might find some bugs skimming the surface of a pond or even creating their own scuba bubble to dive beneath the surface of inland lakes. But insects are virtually absent from the open ocean.

If you look at the hind flippers of southern elephant seals, however, you will find some insects that have made their way to a partially aquatic life. Lice of the species Lepidophth­irus macrorhini dwell on the rear limbs of the large aquatic mammals, which spend nearly 10 months of the year in Antarctic waters and dive up to 6,500 feet below the surface in search of food and may stay under for nearly two hours at a time.

These lice could be the deepest surviving insects in marine ecosystems, according to a study published in July in the Journal of Experiment­al Biology. By enduring such extreme environmen­ts, elephant seal lice can help scientists unravel the mystery of why so few insects have made a home in the ocean’s vastness. L. macrorhini are parasitic, bloodsucki­ng lice that burrow into the seal’s top skin layer to feed.

In 2015, María Soledad Leonardi, a marine biologist at the Instituto de Biología de Organismos Marinos in Argentina, found live lice on male elephant seals that surfaced to breed on King George Island off the coast of Antarctica.

“You can see them with your naked eye,” she said. “They look like miniature crabs.”

Catching 8,000- pound seals at sea to check if lice braved these extreme conditions would be very tricky, Soledad Leonardi said. So her team decided to bring the lice to the lab.

Using tweezers, they pulled the insects from the hind flippers of 15 elephant seal pups born on the beaches of Península Valdés in Argentina. The pups harbor adult lice that are transferre­d from their mothers’ bodies within a few days of birth.

In the lab, the team immersed the lice in individual flash- drive- size chambers filled with seawater that connected to a scuba tank. Then they exposed each louse to a range of water pressures, as much as 200 times greater than that at the sea surface and equivalent to depths ranging between 980 and 6,500 feet. After experienci­ng 10 minutes of this deep- sea environmen­t, 69 of 75 lice emerged alive.

“It was fascinatin­g for me to see that they survived the high pressure,” said Claudio Lazzari, an insect physiologi­st at the University of Tours in France and a coauthor of the study. “It shows that these lice can cope.”

The researcher­s then exposed surviving lice to a water pressure higher or lower than what they were subject to earlier.

“The idea was to reproduce the situation that lice would experience when their host dives through different pressure levels,” Lazzari said. All of the lice were able to tolerate the quick pressure change.

The researcher­s are now looking to conduct experiment­s to see if these insects arrest their activity and energy expenditur­e in the deep sea or if they continue breathing.

“Understand­ing how this group of insects manages to survive underwater will be the key to understand­ing why other groups couldn’t,” Lazzari said.

 ?? Leonardi Lab, via The New York Times Co. ?? Lepidophth­irus macrorhini lice dwell on the rear limbs of southern elephant seals, which spend nearly 10 months of the year in Antarctic waters and may stay under water for nearly two hours at a time.
Leonardi Lab, via The New York Times Co. Lepidophth­irus macrorhini lice dwell on the rear limbs of southern elephant seals, which spend nearly 10 months of the year in Antarctic waters and may stay under water for nearly two hours at a time.

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