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Diving Behavior Reveals Humidity Sensing Ability of Water Deprived Planarians

Yu Pei, Renzhi Qian, Yuan yan, Yixuan Zhang, Liyuan Tan, Xinran Li, Chenxu Lu, Yuxuan Chen, Yuanwei Chi, Kun Hao, Zhen Xu, Guang Yang, Zilun Shao, Yuhao Wang, View ORCID ProfileKaiyuan Huang
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.10.12.511880
Yu Pei
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Renzhi Qian
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Yuan yan
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Yixuan Zhang
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Liyuan Tan
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Xinran Li
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Chenxu Lu
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Yuxuan Chen
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Yuanwei Chi
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Kun Hao
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Zhen Xu
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Guang Yang
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Zilun Shao
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Yuhao Wang
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
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Kaiyuan Huang
1College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University; Beijing, 100193, China
2Tsinghua Institute of Multidisciplinary Biomedical Research (TIMBR), Tsinghua University; 17 Beijing, 100084, China
3National Institute of Biological Sciences (NIBS); Beijing, 102206, China
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  • ORCID record for Kaiyuan Huang
  • For correspondence: huangkaiyuan@nibs.ac.cn
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Abstract

Humidity sensing ability is crucial to terrestrial animals for fitting the environment. Researchers made great progress in recent study about humidity sensing mechanisms of terrestrial animals. However, it is poorly understood whether humidity sensing exists in aquatic animals. Here, we demonstrate that the aquatic planarians, one of the primitive forerunners of later animals, has the ability of humidity sensing and is capable of using the ability to perceive the water beneath itself from a drought place to seek survival. The behavior we discovered is described as diving because the worms twist its body to break away from the mucus that make them adhere to the drought place and drop into the water. The behavior is triggered by rapidly increasing humidity. This finding suggests that humidity sensing ability exists in the lower aquatic animals, and the ability might be used to seek for water when aquatic animals are facing desiccation. The finding also suggests that survival-seeking and decision-making behavior have appeared in the primitive planarian worms.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Footnotes

  • Competing Interest Statement: The authors declare that there is no competing interest in the study.

  • No new results were added. We added more descriptions and explanations to the results.

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted November 14, 2022.
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Diving Behavior Reveals Humidity Sensing Ability of Water Deprived Planarians
Yu Pei, Renzhi Qian, Yuan yan, Yixuan Zhang, Liyuan Tan, Xinran Li, Chenxu Lu, Yuxuan Chen, Yuanwei Chi, Kun Hao, Zhen Xu, Guang Yang, Zilun Shao, Yuhao Wang, Kaiyuan Huang
bioRxiv 2022.10.12.511880; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.10.12.511880
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Diving Behavior Reveals Humidity Sensing Ability of Water Deprived Planarians
Yu Pei, Renzhi Qian, Yuan yan, Yixuan Zhang, Liyuan Tan, Xinran Li, Chenxu Lu, Yuxuan Chen, Yuanwei Chi, Kun Hao, Zhen Xu, Guang Yang, Zilun Shao, Yuhao Wang, Kaiyuan Huang
bioRxiv 2022.10.12.511880; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.10.12.511880

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