Sea slugs grow new p**** every time they mate

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ANI: Washington , Feb 13 2013, 07:36 IST
A sea slug's has an unusual mating behavior - it discards its penis after copulation, grows a new one, and has sex the next day.

The sea slug, Chromodoris reticulata, is a type of soft-bodied marine mollusk, and its disposable penis is very rare in the animal kingdom.

As for what happens after sex ... "The penis just falls off," lead author Ayami Sekizawa told Discovery News.

Sekizawa, a researcher at Osaka City University, and colleagues made the discovery after studying C. reticulata individuals that they collected during scuba diving trips in shallow coral reef areas near Okinawa, Japan.

The researchers set up an experiment tank and watched as the sea slugs copulated 31 times.

These animals are "simultaneous hermaphrodites," meaning each performs both the "male role" of donating sperm to a mating partner and the "female role" of receiving sperm from the partner simultaneously during copulation.

A typical mating episode involves two individuals touching each other with their genital orifices.

They then "project" their penises and each insert them into the other's vagina and start copulation. After a short time, one removes its penis from the partner. Later, the other mate removes its penis too.

Both individuals then crawl away, with their elongated penises still dangling. The sexual organs, which feature backward-pointed spines for possibly trapping rival sperm, would then suddenly sever from their bodies and float away.

"The sea slug sheds 1/3 of the internal penis length after each copulation. The sea slug is able to grow the penis gradually to its original length," Sekizawa said.

The loss and regrowth doesn't seem to hamper the sea slug's active sex life.

"In one case, we observed three successive copulations each separated by approximately 24 hours," the researchers wrote.

Only a few other animals have been found to "dispose" of their penis, or male reproductive appendages. One other is Argonauta, a type of octopus. Some orb-weaving spiders will also shed organs used for mating.

Earlier studies on the periwinkle, a type of edible sea snail, found that they shed their penises after the reproductive season "probably to save the cost of maintenance," Sekizawa and his colleagues said.

The findings are published in the journal Biology Letters.

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Reader's Comments (2)| Post a Comment

sea slugs

Peter | 14-Feb-2013Reply | Forward
I wonder if ouf President ZUMA will have look at this as his famous SPEAR has been hard ridden the last couple of years, what with 5 wives and he might need a transplant in the near future, as I hear he is courting another Wife, good old showerhead ???

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ed | 14-Feb-2013Reply | Forward
Really - 'penis' is now a bad word? Why even upload this article in a financial emag other than the subject matter?

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