PARIS: Scientists have successfully revived microbes
PARIS: Scientists have
successfully revived microbes that had lain dormant at the bottom of the sea
since the age of the dinosaurs, allowing the organisms to eat and even multiply
after eons in the deep.
Their
research sheds light on the remarkable survival power of some of Earth’s most
primitive species, which can exist for tens of millions of years with barely
any oxygen or food before springing back to life in the lab.
A
team led by the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology analysed
ancient sediment samples deposited more than 100 million years ago on the
seabed of the South Pacific.
The
region is renowned for having far fewer nutrients in its sediment than normal,
making it a far-from-ideal site to maintain life over millennia.
The team incubated the
samples to help coax the microbes out of their epoch-spanning slumber. Astonishingly,
they were able to revive nearly all of the microorganisms.
“When
I found them, I was first sceptical whether the findings are from some mistake
or a failure in the experiment,” said lead author Yuki Morono.
“We
now know that there is no age limit for (organisms in the) sub-seafloor
biosphere,” he said.
URI
Graduate School of Oceanography professor and study co-author Steven D’Hondt
said the microbes came from the oldest sediment drilled from the seabed.
“In
the oldest sediment we’ve drilled, with the least amount of food, there are
still living organisms, and they can wake up, grow and multiply,” he said.
Morono
explained that oxygen traces in the sediment allowed the microbes to stay alive
for millions of years while expending virtually no energy.
Energy
levels for seabed microbes “are million of times lower than that of surface
microbes,” he said.
Such
levels would be far too low to sustain the surface microbes, and Morono said it
was a mystery how the seabed organisms had managed to survive.
Previous
studies have shown how bacteria can live on some of the least hospitable places
on Earth, including around undersea vents that are devoid of oxygen.
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