
What Do Earwigs Do With Those Pincers Anyway?
Season 5 Episode 12 | 3m 42sVideo has Closed Captions
Earwigs have some imposing pincers on their rear, and they're not afraid to use them.
Earwigs are equipped with some pretty imposing pincers on their rear, and they're not afraid to use them. But when it comes to these appendages, size isn't everything.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback

What Do Earwigs Do With Those Pincers Anyway?
Season 5 Episode 12 | 3m 42sVideo has Closed Captions
Earwigs are equipped with some pretty imposing pincers on their rear, and they're not afraid to use them. But when it comes to these appendages, size isn't everything.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipGo down by the shoreline and, turn over a rock, and you're likely to find this: a Maritime earwig.
Now don't get stuck on their name.
Earwigs are NOT interested in your ear.
Really, they just want to hide out and hunt tiny prey, like these sand hoppers.
They're cousins to the common European earwig you might find in your backyard.
Both earwigs wield fearsome looking pincers on their rear.
But why keep them on their backside when most animals bear their weapons up front?
For one thing earwigs spend the majority of their lives underground.
So it's a lot easier to drag those massive pincers than to push them.
Scientists call the pincers 'cerci.'
They may look like jaws, but they're actually modified legs.
You can find them on the earwigs' distant relatives too -- like cockroaches and crickets.
Male earwigs have curved pincers On females they're straight.
They use them to hunt, to defend themselves from predators and to brawl.
When one male meets another they size each other up.
If they're evenly matched, it's on.
Using their pincers, they go straight for each others' abdomens.
It's rarely a duel to the death, it's more of a wrestling match.
Usually the bigger one with the bigger pincers sends his opponent running.
The loser scurries off and sulks.
But size isn't everything.
Check out this guy's pincers, they're pretty symmetric.
But this other one's aren't.
See how one end curves around the other?
They're lopsided.
Researchers at San Francisco State University wanted to know if that asymmetry might give some earwigs a competitive advantage.
So they staged matches between males to see if the shape of those pincers made a difference.
And it did.
When evenly-sized earwigs battled, those with more asymmetric pincers won more often.
And winning could mean more territory, more food, and more access to females.
Scientists at Villanova University wanted to know if that asymmetry came at a cost.
Now, In most animals symmetry is a sign of health -- it makes them more attractive to potential mates.
That's why it's pretty rare to find asymmetry in nature.
But earwigs aren't so superficial.
The asymmetry that helps fight doesn't make them less attractive to mates.
Turns out females don't care if a guy's pincers might be a little crooked.
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