iHerp Australia Issue 6 | Page 54

Left: the Bengal Slow Loris (Nycticebus bengalensis). There has been at least one fatality from a slow loris bite. Image by Hoang Mai Thach. Below right: the venom of the blue- ringed octopus (Hapalochlaena spp.) contains tetrodotoxin, a potent neurotoxin that is also lethal if ingested. Image by kaschibo. The adaptive value of venom (the measure of its useful- ness once delivered) is one of the key criteria for ‘being venomous’, and is probably the least contentious. For example, we humans have proteins in our oral secretions (saliva) which can also be found in venoms. We also have specialised glands that produce these secretions. However, the said secretions do not really offer us any adaptive value once out of our mouths. Therefore, we are not venomous. ‘most snake venom toxins are derived from normal body proteins —digestive enzymes for example’ It is not yet understood precisely how, genetically, venoms were recruited as a biochemical weapon. However, DNA replication is an imperfect process, and mutations provide the perfect platform for the emergence of new, beneficial traits. Current research indicates that most snake venom toxins are essentially derived from normal body proteins - digestive pancreatic enzymes, for example - which, through some kind of genetic hiccup, were duplicated, expressed, and secreted by cells in oral glands, and were subsequently exapted and weaponised: delivered from one organism into the body of another, in which they exert a toxic effect. Over time, selection favoured mutated forms of these molecules which induced their effects with greater power, speed, and/or efficiency. Specialised delivery systems were developed in parallel, such as venom glands coupled with fangs or stingers. Research points toward a similar mechanism of recruitment in some other lineages. For example, investigations are underway to demonstrate the homology between the proteins secreted by the skin’s regulatory mucosal glands and those of the venom glands adjoining the spines in some species of catfish. This coupled ‘venom system’ is considered by many scientists to be a key aspect of differentiating between animals which incidentally introduce their oral secretions into the body of another organism and those that actively do so. Ok, we are getting somewhere. So, to meet the criteria of being venomous, an animal must have specialised glands or cells which produce a toxic secretion that is adminis- tered into the body of the victim, via a wound, through the use of a specialised delivery mechanism? Well, sort of. Cue caveat number one. Heard of the slow loris (Nycticebus spp.)? This genus is considered by many to contain the world’s only venomous primates. There are currently four described species, all of which are found in Southeast Asia. These nocturnal primates have brachial glands on their inner elbow that excrete a strong- smelling substance when they feel threatened. The slow loris licks this exudate, and the enzymes in its saliva break down and activate the toxins. The loris may bite defensively, thereby introducing the toxins to the animal that is the source of the threat. However, neither the secretion nor the licking occurs the moment that the threat is perceived, but instead follow