Parasite tales The jewel wasps zombie slave Carl Zimmer

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

I would like to introduce you
to my favorite parasite.

There are millions that I could choose from

and this is it:

it’s called the jewel wasp.

You can find it
in parts of Africa and Asia.

It’s a little under an inch long,

and it is a beautiful looking parasite.

Now, you may be saying to yourself,

“This is not a parasite.

It’s not a tapeworm,

it’s not a virus,

how could a wasp be a parasite?”

You are probably thinking
about regular wasps,

you know, the ones that build
paper nests as their house.

Well, the thing is that the jewel wasp

makes its house inside
a living cockroach.

Here’s how it happens.

A jewel wasp is flying around,
looking for a cockroach.

When it sees one, it lands
and bites on its wing.

So, I’ll be the cockroach.

Be-wha! Bewha!

And the cockroach starts shaking it off,

“Get away from me!”

The wasp very quickly starts
stinging the cockroach.

All of a sudden, the cockroach can’t move,

for about a minute.

And then it recovers

and stands up.

It could run away now,

but it doesn’t.

It just doesn’t want to.

It just stays there.

It’s become a zombie slave.

Again, I’m not making this up.

The wasp goes off,

it walks away and finds a hole

and digs it out, makes it into a burrow.

It walks back.

This can take up to half an hour.

The cockroach is still there.

What do we do now?

The wasps grabs onto one of the antenna,

bites down on it,

of the cockroach,

and pulls the cockroach.

And the cockroach says, “Alright,”

and walks like a dog on a leash.

The wasp takes it
all the way down into the burrow.

The cockroach says, “Nice place.”

The wasp takes care of some business

and then goes and leaves the burrow

and seals it shut,

leaving the cockroach entombed
in darkness, still alive.

The cockroach says, “Alright,
I’ll stay here if you want.”

Now, I mentioned that
the cockroach took care,

ah, the wasp took care
of a little business

before it left the burrow.

The business was laying an egg

on the underside of the cockroach.

The egg hatches.

Out comes a wasp larva.

It looks kind of like
a maggot with big, nasty jaws.

It chews a hole into the cockroach

and starts to feed from the outside.

It gets bigger,
like you can see over here.

And then when it gets big enough,

it decides to crawl into the hole,

into the cockroach.

So now it’s inside
the still-living cockroach

and the cockroach doesn’t mind much.

This goes on for about a month.

The larva grows and grows and grows,

then makes a pupa,
kind of like a cocoon.

Inside there it grows eyes,

it grows wings,

it grows legs,

the cockroach is still alive,
still waiting.

Finally the wasp is ready to leave,

and that’s when the cockroach finally dies

because the fullly-formed adult wasp

crawls out of the cockroach’s dying body.

The wasp shakes itself off,

climbs out of the burrow,

goes and finds another wasp to mate with

to start this whole, crazy cycle again.

So, this is not science fiction,

this happens every day,
all over the world.

And scientists are
totally fascinated by this.

They’re just starting to figure out
how all this happens.

And, when you really start
to look at the science of it,

you start to kind of respect
this very creepy wasp.

You see, the thing is that
when it attacks the cockroach,

it’s not just stinging wildly,

it delivers two precise stings.

It knows this cockroach’s nervous system

like you know the back of your hand.

The first sting goes to that spot there,

called the “walking rhythm generators,”

and, as you can guess,

those are the neurons that send signals

to the legs to move.

It blocks the channels
that the neurons use

to send these signals.

So the cockroach wants to go,
it wants to run away,

but it can’t because
it can’t move its legs.

And that lasted for about a minute.

This is really sophisticated pharmacology.

We actually use the same method,

a drug called Ivermectin,

to cure river blindness,

which is caused by a parasitic worm

that gets into your eye.

If you take Ivermectin,
you paralyze the worm

using the same strategy.

Now, we discovered this in the 1970s,

the wasp has been doing this for millions of years.

Then comes the second sting.

Now the second sting actually hits two places along the way.

And to try to imagine how this can happen,

I want you to picture yourself with a friend

who’s got a very long, very, very scary looking needle.

And your friend,

or at least you thought he was your friend,

sticks it in your neck,

goes into your skull,

stops off at one part of your brain

and injects some drugs,

then keeps going in your brain

and injects some more.

These are two particular spots,

marked here, “SEG”,

and you can see the tip of it in the brain, marked “Br”.

Now, we can do this, but it’s really hard for us.

It’s called stereotactic drug delivery.

You have to put a patient in a big metal frame

to hold them still,

you need CAT Scans to know where you’re going,

so you look at the picture and say,

“Are we going the right way?”

The jewel wasp has sensors on its stinger

and scientists think that it can actually feel its way

through the cockroach’s brain until it gets

to the exact, right place,

and then penetrates an individual neuron

and then delivers the goods.

So, this is quite amazing stuff,

and what seems to happen then

is that the wasp is taking away the control

that the cockroach has over its own body.

It’s taking away the cockroach’s free will.

We didn’t really appreciate that cockroaches

have free will until this wasp showed us.

And, we have no idea how it’s doing this,

we don’t know yet what the venom has in it

and we don’t know which circuits

it’s hitting in the cockroach’s brain,

and I think that’s why this is,

most of all, my favorite parasite

because we have so much left to learn from it.

Thank you very much.