• LeoPanthera 4 days ago

    Leeches can also be used for weather forecasting*, as in the greatest-named invention of all time, the Tempest Prognosticator.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tempest_prognosticator

    * results may vary.

    • aaronharnly 3 days ago

      The original mixture of experts design, perhaps :) Thank you for sharing this!

    • vintagedave 6 days ago

      This is actually a fascinating article, and I am suitably grossed out and fascinated at the same time. Good HN material, in the 'Anything that good hackers would find interesting. That includes more than hacking and startups.' guideline sense.

      • mjd 4 days ago

        Sucher's substack is reliably interesting in that way, you should check out the back issues

      • nycticorax 3 days ago

        My PhD research was actually studying the leech nervous system. They're still an important 'model' organism in neurobiology. Probably not as important in the field at large as they were in, say, the 1970s, but still. They're also a good system for neurophysiology education, because they are cheap and easy to obtain, have large-ish neurons that are identifiable from animal to animal, and their nervous system has a relatively simple organization.

        • amelius 3 days ago

          The other day someone posted something interesting about leeches. Apparently you can use anti-mosquito spray to make them detach from the skin in minutes.

          • jt2190 3 days ago

            Saw that comment and I’m pretty sure that it is a bad idea since the article explicitly mentioned that stressing the leeches causes them to “vomit blood back into your bloodstream” and introduces a risk of bacterial infections. The advice was to use a credit card to quickly break the suction seal and force the leech to detach.

            • stanislavb 3 days ago

              We've used pocket hand sanitiser to make Leeches to detach.

            • culi 3 days ago

              Your local hospital quite likely currently has a tank of leeches. They are still used in surgery. Especially after reattachment surgeries. They secrete anticoagulants which prevent blood clotting. They are also used in microsurgery to increase blood flow to a certain area.

              • wk_end 3 days ago

                Is there some reason why we can’t either extract those anticoagulants from the leeches or otherwise synthesize them?

                • ot 3 days ago

                  From Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hirudo_medicinalis)

                  > Because of the minuscule amounts of hirudin present in leeches, it is impractical to harvest the substance for widespread medical use. Hirudin (and related substances) are synthesized using recombinant techniques. Devices called "mechanical leeches" that dispense heparin and perform the same function as medicinal leeches have been developed, but they are not yet commercially available.

              • qrush 4 days ago

                Leeches are very much in use today in the US, in operating rooms especially!

              • ChrisMarshallNY 3 days ago

                TIL that we have a legit leech distributor down the road.

                https://leechesusa.com

                • culi 3 days ago

                  It's a bigger business than most people realize. Most operating rooms probably maintain a tank of leeches. They are used in reattachment and plastic surgery as well as microsurgery

                • threemux 3 days ago

                  Certainly didn't expect to read about leeches today (or Napoleon's piles) but hey that's what's great about HN

                  • BobBagwill 3 days ago

                    Swimming in Minnesota lakes: always check for leeches. It seems like they hang out close to shore, so swimming near the dock or weeds increases the chance of being an involuntary blood donor.

                    New Guinea: they have land leeches that hang out at the end of branches, like ticks. Hikers use anti-leech sleeves and gaiters.

                    I say: nuke from orbit, it's the only way to be sure. ;-)

                    • wagwang 4 days ago

                      I would be down to try leeching but I have an irrational fear theyre gunna lay eggs in my bloodstream.

                      • Catbert59 4 days ago

                        Ssh... don't fight the symbiosis... accept your fate

                        • IAmBroom 3 days ago

                          EXACTLY what a cordiceps host would say!

                        • MarcelOlsz 4 days ago

                          You'll be fine. I went swamp swimming plenty as a kid and my grandmother would salt the leeches off me.

                          • atsaloli 3 days ago

                            Nice!

                            That reminds me of https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/bloodsuckers-1.5361074 where I learned:

                            "... resist the temptation to pour salt on [a bloodsucking leech], as folk wisdom recommends, because that could cause the leech to vomit into the wound, posing unnecessary health risks, suggest biologists behind a new exhibit on bloodsucking animals."

                        • Groxx 4 days ago

                          Okay, yea, that was a fun read. Thanks for the article/post/what the heck is the right term anyway! I learned lots of things I did not expect to learn today.