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Overview of Regeneration and Repair01:19

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In the CNS, neurogenesis, the birth of new neurons from stem cells, is limited to the hippocampus in adults. In other regions of the brain and spinal cord, neurogenesis is almost non-existent due to inhibitory influences from neuroglia, especially oligodendrocytes, and the absence of growth-stimulating cues. The myelin produced by oligodendrocytes in the CNS inhibits neuronal regeneration. Furthermore, astrocytes proliferate rapidly after neuronal damage, forming scar tissue that physically...
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Following injury, the integrity of the injured tissues must be reestablished. For example, in skin tissue, wound repair involves coordination among resident skin cells, blood mononuclear cells, extracellular matrix, growth factors, and cytokines to complete the healing cascade.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Feb 16, 2026

Contusion Spinal Cord Injury via a Microsurgical Laminectomy in the Regenerative Axolotl
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Contusion Spinal Cord Injury via a Microsurgical Laminectomy in the Regenerative Axolotl

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Saving the injured: Evolution and mechanisms.

Erik T Frank1, K Eduard Linsenmair1

  • 1Department of Animal Ecology and Tropical Biology, Biocenter, University of Würzburg, Am Hubland, Würzburg, Germany.

Communicative & Integrative Biology
|December 21, 2017
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Animal rescue behavior is rare but observed across diverse species. This study explores how social carrying and alarm signals in ants may precede rescue, comparing evolutionary preconditions for this behavior in different animal groups.

Keywords:
chemical communicationempathyhelping behaviorpro social behaviorrescue behaviorsocial insect

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Area of Science:

  • Ethology
  • Evolutionary Biology
  • Animal Behavior

Background:

  • Rescue behavior towards injured individuals is infrequently documented across various animal taxa, including birds, mammals, and social insects.
  • Understanding the evolutionary origins of altruistic behaviors like rescue is crucial for comprehending sociality.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate potential antecedents of rescue behavior in ants, such as social carrying and alarm pheromones.
  • To compare the necessary preconditions for the evolution of rescue behavior across different animal taxa.
  • To analyze how a common evolutionary problem (rescuing injured group members) leads to diverse behavioral mechanisms.

Main Methods:

  • Comparative analysis of existing observations of rescue and related behaviors in ants, birds, and mammals.
  • Theoretical discussion of evolutionary preconditions including individual value, injury risk, and social interaction.
  • Examination of ant-specific behaviors like social carrying and alarm signaling.

Main Results:

  • Social carrying and alarm pheromones are identified as likely precursors to rescue behavior in ants.
  • Key preconditions for rescue behavior evolution include high individual value, significant injury risk, and strong social interaction.
  • Despite different mechanisms, diverse taxa face similar challenges in rescuing injured group members.

Conclusions:

  • The evolution of rescue behavior, while rare, is driven by shared ecological and social pressures across taxa.
  • Ants exhibit unique adaptations, like social carrying, that may represent early forms of rescue behavior.
  • Convergent evolution likely explains the emergence of similar rescue-related problems and diverse solutions in the animal kingdom.