Hi My Friends: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., A third of Earth's organisms live in rocks and sediments, but their lives have been a mystery .
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By some estimates, a third of Earth's organisms live in our planet's
rocks and sediments, yet their lives are almost a complete mystery.
This
week, the work of microbiologist James Holden of the University of
Massachusetts-Amherst and colleagues shines a light into this dark
world.
In the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), they report the first detailed data on methane-exhaling microbes that live deep in the cracks of hot undersea volcanoes.
"Evidence
has built that there's an incredible amount of biomass in the Earth's
subsurface, in the crust and marine sediments, perhaps as much as all
the plants and animals on the surface," says Holden.
"We're
interested in the microbes in the deep rock, and the best place to study
them is at hydrothermal vents at undersea volcanoes. Warm water there
brings the nutrient and energy sources these microbes need."
Just
as biologists studied the habitats and life requirements of giraffes and
penguins when they were new to science, Holden says, "for the first
time we're studying these subsurface microorganisms, defining their
habitat requirements and determining how they differ among species."
The result will advance scientists' comprehension of biogeochemical cycles in the deep ocean, he and co-authors believe.
"Studies
such as this add greatly to our understanding of microbial processes in
the still poorly-known deep biosphere," says David Garrison, program
director in the National Science Foundation's Division of Ocean
Sciences, which funded the research.
The project also addresses
such questions as what metabolic processes may have looked like on Earth
three billion years ago, and what alien microbial life might look like
on other planets.
Because the study involves methanogens--microbes
that inhale hydrogen and carbon dioxide to produce methane as waste--it
may also shed light on natural gas formation on Earth.
One major
goal was to test results of predictive computer models and to establish
the first environmental hydrogen threshold for hyperthermophilic
(super-heat-loving), methanogenic (methane-producing) microbes in
hydrothermal vent fluids.
"Models have predicted the
'habitability' of the rocky environments we're most interested in, but
we wanted to ground-truth these models and refine them," Holden says.
In
a two-liter bioreactor at UMass Amherst where the scientists could
control hydrogen levels, they grew pure cultures of hyperthermophilic
methanogens from their study site alongside a commercially available
hyperthermophilic methanogen species.
The researchers found that
growth measurements for the organisms were about the same. All grew at
the same rate when given equal amounts of hydrogen and had the same
minimum growth requirements.
Holden and Helene Ver Eecke at UMass
Amherst used culturing techniques to look for organisms in nature and
then study their growth in the lab.
Co-investigators Julie Huber
at the Marine Biological Laboratory on Cape Cod provided molecular
analyses of the microbes, while David Butterfield and Marvin Lilley at
the University of Washington contributed geochemical fluid analyses.
Using the research submarine Alvin,
they collected samples of hydrothermal fluids flowing from black
smokers up to 350 degrees C (662 degrees F), and from ocean floor cracks
with lower temperatures.
Samples were taken from Axial Volcano
and the Endeavour Segment, both long-term observatory sites along an
undersea mountain range about 200 miles off the coast of Washington and
Oregon and more than a mile below the ocean's surface.
"We used
specialized sampling instruments to measure both the chemical and
microbial composition of hydrothermal fluids," says Butterfield.
"This
was an effort to understand the biological and chemical factors that
determine microbial community structure and growth rates."
A happy twist awaited the researchers as they pieced together a picture of how the methanogens live and work.
At
the low-hydrogen Endeavour site, they found that a few
hyperthermophilic methanogens eke out a living by feeding on the
hydrogen waste produced by other hyperthermophiles.
"This was
extremely exciting," says Holden. "We've described a methanogen
ecosystem that includes a symbiotic relationship between microbes."
The research was also supported by the NASA Astrobiology Institute and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
-NSF-
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