The Guardian (USA)

Box seat: scientists solve the mystery of why wombats have cube-shaped poo

- Natasha May

How wombats produce their cubeshape poo has long been a biological puzzle but now an internatio­nal study has provided the answer to this unusual natural phenomenon.

The cube shape is formed within the intestines – not at the point of exit, as previously thought – according to research published in scientific journal Soft Matter on Thursday.

The paper expands upon preliminar­y findings first presented at a meeting of the American Physical Society’s fluid dynamics division in Georgia in 2018.

Dr Scott Carver, wildlife ecologist at the University of Tasmania and one of the authors of the research paper, said “there were wonderfull­y colourful hypotheses around but no one had tested it”.

There was speculatio­n that wombats had a square-shaped anal sphincter, that the faeces get squeezed between the pelvic bones, as well as the “complete nonsense” idea that wombats pat the faeces into shape after they deposit them.

The project originated four years ago when Carver was dissecting a euthanised wombat hit by a car and noticed the cubes in the last metre of the wombat’s intestine. Carver described it as an “isn’t that odd moment”.

“The thing that is striking, how do you produce cubes inside essentiall­y a soft tube?”

The team of researcher­s in Australia, including the head veterinari­an at Taronga zoo, Larry Vogelnest, tested the tensile strings of the intestine while physicists in the US based at the Georgia Institute of Technology created mathematic­al models to simulate the production of cubes.

The team discovered big changes in the thickness of muscles inside the intestine, varying between two stiffer regions and two more flexible regions.

“The rhythmical contractio­ns help form the sharp corners of the cubes,” Carver said.

When preliminar­y findings were presented in 2018 “at that point researcher­s believed there were four stiff and four flexible regions,” he said. “But what final research has confirmed is that the wombat’s intestine has two stiff and two flexible regions.”

Since 2018, Australian researcher­s have performed the histology as well as a CT scan upon a live wombat, and concluded that the changes in muscle thickness, in addition to the drying out of the faecal material in the distal colon, produced the distinctiv­e shape.

Asked why wombats have this fea

ture, Carver said one theory was that wombats, with their strong sense of smell, communicat­e with each other via faeces and that the cube shape helps prevent the faeces from rolling away.

The researcher­s also found that cube-shaped faeces on an eight degree slope rolled far less than sphericals­haped models.

Vogelnest aided the research by facilitati­ng an ethically approved CT scan of a live wombat, zoo resident Lucy-Lu.

“This was one of the more unusual research [projects] Taronga has been involved in, a bit quirky, but it does answer a very significan­t question, one that a lot of people ask” he said.

As well as the benefits of better understand­ing wombats themselves, Carver said the discovery highlighte­d a new way of manufactur­ing cubes inside a soft tube, which could be applied to other fields including manufactur­ing, clinical pathology and digestive health.

 ?? Photograph: mlharing/Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? Scientists believe the cube shape of the wombat’s poo may aid in communicat­ion, as spherical faeces are more likely to roll away.
Photograph: mlharing/Getty Images/iStockphot­o Scientists believe the cube shape of the wombat’s poo may aid in communicat­ion, as spherical faeces are more likely to roll away.

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