On Sept. 3, a
Guatemalan news channel reported the birth of a misshapen pig, which has a face
that looks more human than swine. The night before the pig's birth, villagers
say they witnessed unexplained bright lights hovering in the sky, and so they
attributed the piglet's bizarre features to foul play by aliens.
Members of the local
media ran with the UFO theory — are aliens tampering with our livestock, or is
this somehow a side effect of radiation from spaceships?
"The whole idea
that it could be aliens or a cross-species outcome is ridiculous," Max
Rothschild, director of the Center for Integrated Animal Genomics at Iowa State
University and coordinator of the USDA National Pig Genome Project, told Life's
Little Mysteries. Instead, there is a perfectly ordinary explanation for the
creature's humanoid appearance.
One to 2 percent of
pigs are born with defects, Rothschild said. They aren't mutants, exactly —
there's usually no genetic mutation to blame — instead it's usually more of a
mechanical error that arises in the womb, during development. They can result
from "something in the feed or just bad luck, such as cells not dividing
properly. There's a replicative mechanism and sometimes that just doesn't go
right."
Rothschild, who has
done extensive research on birth defects in pigs, thinks the most likely
problem with the piglet in the video is hydrocephalus — the buildup of fluid
inside the skull, which causes it to swell. He wasn't startled to see its
deformed face, either: "Snout problems are common. I have a two-headed pig
in a jar in my office. But it has no genetic basis — it just happens during
development," he said.
He pointed out that
the offspring of all mammals, including humans, can experience developmental
defects during gestation. This can sometimes lead to a silent miscarriage early
in the pregnancy. "In pigs where you have multiple births, you could have
crowding or some other issue that creates the defect [later on]."
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