A single peptide helps starfish get rid of a limb when attacked
For many creatures, having a limb caught in a predatorβs mouth is usually a death sentence. Not starfish, thoughβthey can detach the limb and leave the predator something to chew on while they crawl away. But how can they pull this off?
Starfish and some other animals (including lizards and salamanders) are capable of autonomy (shedding a limb when attacked). The biology behind this phenomenon in starfish was largely unknown until now. An international team of researchers led by Maurice Elphick, professor of Animal Physiology and Neuroscience at Queen Mary University of London, have found that a neurohormone released by starfish is largely responsible for detaching limbs that end up in a predatorβs jaws.
So how does this neurohormone (specifically a neuropeptide) let the starfish get away? When a starfish is under stress from a predatory attack, this hormone is secreted, stimulating a muscle at the base of the animalβs arm that allows the arm to break off.