THE WILSONITE : Reloaded

Reduced number of confused rambling adolescents, same messed up blog, 2nd year of awesome fun! cut loose!!!

Thursday, September 29, 2005

DARIUS MISTRY'S PROUD DISCOVERY OF THE DAY!

Colombia, South America.

Midday, in the depths of a jungle west of the Andes along a Pacific river. It is dark, hot, and dismal. Dusk never leaves the day below the tree canopy. Rainwater pools in huge, still leaves. A heavy atmosphere clings to the earth like a coiling miasma.

"Thwoop," breaks the silence as a poison dart hurtles from a blowgun to its target: a howler monkey secure on a lower branch of a tree towering a hundred feet above the rain forest floor. The dart penetrates the monkey's reddish fur, into her flesh and bloodstream. She falls, paralyzed, unable to breathe, and her heart fails.

The poison from the skin of the world's most poisonous known creature-the tiny, 1.5-inch, Golden Poison Frog (Phyllobates terribilis)-kills the monkey.

An average P. terribilis contains about one milligram of poison, which is enough to kill 10,000 mice-perhaps enough to kill 10 to 20 humans if the poison reaches their bloodstreams.

This extraordinarily lethal poison (a steroid alkaloid, called batrachotoxin) almost does not occur in nature. We have found this poison only among three poison frogs in Colombia and two poison birds in Papua, New Guinea.

The yellow frog stores the poison in skin glands, as do most frogs. Due to their poison, frogs taste awful to predators but P. terribilis' poison kills whatever eats it-except for a snake (Liophis epinephelus). This snake is resistant to the frog's poison but not immune.

"We fed one juvenile frog to a snake and the snake showed great distress and was rendered helpless for several hours," says John Daly, chief of the National Health Institute's bioorganic chemistry laboratory.

The poison frogs are perhaps the only creatures immune to this poison. The poison attacks the sodium channels of the cells. Through the ages, the clever frog has evolved special sodium channels that the poison can not harm.

Frogs normally have no occasion to eat their own poison but this frog is different. The frog apparently eats the same poison as his own but produced by some OTHER CREATURE. He eats the unknown creatures as we might eat shrimp or chicken: just standard food. Frogs grown in captivity, however, can't eat the same food and they are NOT poisonous. "All evidence indicates that such frogs obtain the poisons unchanged from some creature in their diet," says Daly.

"Thus, the high toxicity of P. terribilis appears due to consumption of an unknown mysterious small insect or other arthropod, which may truly be the most poisonous creature on Earth.


4 Comments:

  • At 11:02 PM, Blogger THE WILSONITE said…

    im not sure how dis is gonna help you in socio tomm bt gud info nevertheless..i dont know if it touched ne LIVES though
    -shahvan

     
  • At 3:13 PM, Blogger THE WILSONITE said…

    very erm.. informative...
    ill keep this frog thingee in mind when sid posts mean blogs.. so mayb icud shove it it up u knw where with a rod!!!!

    wheeee....
    ola!
    tanvi
    (n shaven.. im sure it did..
    lives touching is the purpose of our blog. "lives" only. dont get excited.)

     
  • At 6:02 PM, Blogger THE WILSONITE said…

    You want to shove a frog up there with a rod now?

    You know, I always think every day you couldn't get higher on the Kinky meter, but I'm ALWAYS surprised the next day!
    :-)

    Darius

     
  • At 7:55 PM, Blogger THE WILSONITE said…

    Croak... k . Dr.Mistry...or shud i say MYSTERY...whats next on your cards....im waitin...
    was gud thou

    SAHIRR

     

Post a Comment

<< Home