Could Some Microbes Live on Air Alone? - podcast episode cover

Could Some Microbes Live on Air Alone?

Jan 03, 20183 min
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Episode description

Researchers have found Antarctic microbes that appear to get all the nutrients they need from thin air. Could this change our search for extraterrestrial life?

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain stuff from how stuff works, pay their brain stuff luring Vogelbon. Here, life's resilience keeps astounding us. Unimaginable as it may seem, there's a thriving population of microorganisms in the cold, dry, nutrient poor soils of Antarctica. A study may have just revealed the secret to their survival, and that revelation could transform our quest to find life on other planets. Antarctica is a continent which famously goes dark for months on end during the winter season, a

period in which it sees no sunlight. This presents a big challenge to organisms who need to photosynthesize, that is, convert solar light into food. Intense dryness is another hurdle. Certain parts of the continent receive no precipitation whatsoever, and even though Antarctica is covered in ice, drinkable water is scarce. And then we have the issue of carbon. All known life is based on this element, and yet very little of it can be found in Antarctic dirt. But life

uh finds a way. For years now, biologists have known about the existence of diverse bacteria communities in Antarctic as soils. How could anything survive under such extreme conditions. To gain some insight, a team of Australian and New Zealander scientists took a hard look at micro filled dirt samples from two ice free sites in eastern Antarctica. Both areas are deserts where no plants can grow. The McMurdo Dry Valley's region has even been compared to the surface of Mars.

The place has received no rainfall in almost two million years, its humidity levels are staggeringly low, and ice, snow, and liquid water are all practically non existent there. On December six, the team published their findings in the journal Nature. They reported seeing DNA traces from twenty three microbial organisms inside

those soil samples. By reconstructing the microbes genomes, the scientists learned that many of these life forms had genes that made them exceptionally good at processing carbon monoxide and hydrogen. The researchers theorized that the organisms are able to meet their energy requirements by pulling both of these gases, along

with carbon dioxide, straight out of the atmosphere. In other words, because of Antarctica's shortage of sunlight and suitable water, as well as nutrient poor soil, these microbes could be surviving off of air alone. Should this be true, planets and moons that were once written off as completely uninhabitable might be able to sustain life after all. Maybe alien organisms don't need drinking water or abundant sunlight on their homeworlds. Instead, it could be that the only thing they require is

the right combination of atmospheric gases. But the study scientists say more research is needed to see if this phenomenon exists in other parts of the world as well as outside of it. Today's episode was written by Mark Mancini and produced by Tristan McNeil. For more on this and lots of other lively topics, visit our home planet, how Stuff Works dot com.

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