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Imagine you're being attacked by a ferocious predator.
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With no chance of escape, you do what any courageous, self-respecting possum would do:
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curl into an immobile state called catatonia, stick out your tongue, drool, and ooze some foul-smelling liquid from your anal glands.
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Disgusted, your assailant loosens its grip, decides you're not the dinner it was looking for, and departs.
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After 10 minutes, you resurrect and merrily saunter on.
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From lemurs to lizards, ants to amphibians, sharks to chickens, hundreds of animals "play dead" as a survival tactic.
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Nicknamed "playing possum" after its star performer, feigning death is also called thanatosis.
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That's from Thanatos, the ancient Greek deity of death.
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But most scientists call it tonic immobility, or TI.
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How and why TI occurs depends on the species and situation.
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Spewing stench and adopting odd postures are common and often play important roles.
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Other animals sacrifice their neighbors: quail chicks that freeze while their kin run amok have a better chance of survival when pursued by a cat.
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Speaking of cats, feline mothers can pinch the napes of their kittens' necks and induce another kind of immobility called clipnosis.
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This keeps their kittens quiet and easy to transport.
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Most of the physiological mechanisms underlying these theatrics originate in the parasympathetic nervous system, better known for controlling cycles of resting and digesting.
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In possums, the parasympathetic nervous system causes their heart rates to drop by nearly half, respiration by a third, and body temperatures by more than half a degree Celsius for up to an hour.
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The neurotransmitter dopamine also plays a part.
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Flour beetles with low dopamine levels, play dead more frequently than those with high levels.
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And anything blocking dopamine receptor sites can lengthen catatonia.
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But maintaining a death ruse isn't easy.
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The performers are constantly gauging their surroundings for queues on when it's safe to rise.
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Chickens, for instance, can sense when a predator's eyes are upon them.
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Researchers know this, because when they used a stuffed hawk in an experiment, their chicken subjects came out of their catatonia quicker when the hawk's eyes were averted.
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Other animals use TI for purposes other than defense.
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When the sleeper cichlid feels peckish, it sinks to the lake floor and lies motionless.
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Its splotchy coloration making it seem like a rotting carcass.
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If a small scavenger investigates, this undead trickster strikes.
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Some animals even feign death as a sexual ploy.
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Male nursery spiders offer gifts of silk-wrapped insects in hopes of wooing females.
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But those females are known to eat love-seeking males.
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By playing dead while the female eagerly devours her snack, these males can cautiously revive and improve their chances of successfully mating.
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So TI can work to an animal's advantage, unless someone else knows its secret.
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California orcas can flip over young great white sharks, inducing TI for so long the immobilized sharks — who must move to respire — essentially suffocate.
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Humans can also flip sharks into TI.
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By stroking a shark's electrically-sensitive snout and gently turning it over, researchers can induce TI that lasts up to 15 minutes.
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That's enough time to insert tags, remove hooks, and even perform surgeries.
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There are risks however:
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TI can hamper respiration and induce hyperglycemia, a sign of stress.
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So this technique should only be used when necessary.
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Humans can also experience TI when they freeze with fear during violent assaults.
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Recognizing this ancient, involuntary form of self-defense has significant implications when trying to understand why some victims don't flee or fight in the face of danger.
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So, studying TI in non-human animals not only helps us better understand some odd behaviors, it can also help us better understand our own, sometimes counterintuitive, responses to violence.
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Love animals? Check out this playlist for more videos on some of our favorite furry and not-so-furry friends.