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86-Million-Year-Old Bacteria Found In Pacific Ocean Still Consuming Oxygen

 |  By Posted: Updated: 05/18/2012 11:28 am

Microbes

At first glance, there doesn't appear to be much happening in the mud buried 30 meters below the Pacific Ocean sea floor. But this ancient muck, which hasn't had a fresh shot of food or sunlight since the days of the dinosaurs, still harbors life--if just barely. Scientists have discovered that deep-sea microbial communities, buried for 86 million years, are still consuming oxygen, albeit at extraordinarily low rates. These microorganisms eking out an existence in slow motion reveal just how little it takes to sustain life on our own planet, and potentially on others.

Microbes such as bacteria are the most numerous organisms on Earth, and about 90% of them live in sediments buried under the sea floor. To take a peak at this microscopic life in its natural habitat, a team of scientists including Hans RĂžy, a microbiologist at Aarhus University in Denmark, traveled to the tropical waters of the Pacific Ocean. There, they collected mud from the sea floor, which builds up for millions of years like a giant layer cake as newer sediments pile on top of older ones.

The scientists jammed a large metal pipe 30 meters into the sea bottom and used a piston to suck out a long column of reddish clay. After hauling the sediment onboard, they probed the core with a needlelike sensor to measure the oxygen concentration in each layer. The researchers knew how much oxygen should have diffused down into each section of sediment from the seawater, so any "missing" oxygen meant microbes had consumed it.

Moving deeper through the core is like moving back in time, studying older and older communities of microorganisms. "We can use the Pacific as a natural experiment that has been running for 86 million years," RĂžy says.

In most places in the world's oceans, microbes consume all the oxygen less than 10 centimeters into the sediment and below that depth switch to using other compounds for respiration. However, in a column of mud from the North Pacific Gyre, an area 1000 kilometers north of Hawaii, the researchers detected oxygen stretching down to 28 meters because the microbial community was too sparse to consume it all.

Few microbes persist in this region, dubbed an "ocean desert." Its crystalline, nutrient-poor waters support scant quantities of the floating, microscopic algae that microbes feed on once the algae die. Because less than a millimeter of sediment accumulates every 1000 years, the few algae that fall to the sea floor are mostly consumed before they get buried. What's left over makes it deep under the surface and supports a meager population of microbes, which is too small to deplete all the oxygen. Scientists need the gas to still be present in the sediment to actually measure microbial rates of oxygen consumption. Thus, the core from the North Pacific provided a rare opportunity to assess the vital signs of old, deep microbe communities.

The scientists discovered that microbes can subsist on scraps of long-buried organic material because they consume it together with oxygen extremely slowly. Those living below 20 meters in the sediments of the North Pacific Gyre are consuming oxygen at a rate of 0.001 micromoles of oxygen per liter of sediment per year, the team reports online today in Science. At this rate, the microbes in 1 cubic meter of sediment would take about 10 years to consume the amount of oxygen the average person uses in one breath, says Tori Hoehler, a biogeochemist at the NASA Ames Research Center at Moffett Field in California who was not involved in the research.

Hoehler says that the research could inform the search for life on other planets. After determining whether an environment has enough water to support living organisms, he says, "these sorts of studies really address the next important question: Is there enough food for them to live?" Understanding life's requirements for energy is key to determining the potential for life beyond Earth, Hoehler says. "They've taken a significant step in showing us, based on our own environments, what those requirements are."

The findings also give RĂžy an appreciation for life here on Earth: "I find it so fascinating that you can take a cubic meter of mud and then store it for 86 million years, and somebody's still living in it."

ScienceNOW, the daily online news service of the journal Science

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At first glance, there doesn't appear to be much happening in the mud buried 30 meters below the Pacific Ocean sea floor. But this ancient muck, which hasn't had a fresh shot of food or sunlight sinc...
At first glance, there doesn't appear to be much happening in the mud buried 30 meters below the Pacific Ocean sea floor. But this ancient muck, which hasn't had a fresh shot of food or sunlight sinc...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Akhet
Is kind of like 2Pac+Doctor Who
10:39 PM on 05/23/2012
Get ready for the Zombie outbreak. Somewhere. Right now. One of the researchers has developed a strange cough. Its only a matter of time.
07:42 PM on 05/21/2012
***********open mind to all things in creation !*********
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Lorindol
I shall consider it . . .
05:19 AM on 05/23/2012
Even closed-mindedness?
09:38 PM on 05/20/2012
Reptilicus!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marignymitch
E pluribus unum percent
02:14 PM on 05/20/2012
Joan Rivers isn't the oldest organism on earth!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WorkhelpWorkhelp
Control your money locally. Charter banks now.
03:17 AM on 05/21/2012
Yes. Yes she is.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kwaut lizard
Reductio ad Absurdum
01:02 PM on 05/21/2012
They meant 'oldest breathing' organism on earth!
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Ponicrat
Freedom of, and from religion.
02:10 PM on 05/20/2012
Just watch. Some day we'll find life on mars and the moon. But it'll only be because it was so dang hard to get it all off our rockets.
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bryanzth
Honest to Goodness USA Patriot!
06:25 PM on 05/20/2012
Kinda like smallpox getting loose in the Americas, eh? ;o)

BZ.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rg9rts
Carpe Diem! This aint rehearsal
12:25 PM on 05/20/2012
So there is hope for ET after all. ~~(^..^)
11:17 AM on 05/20/2012
"To take a peak at this microscopic life in its natural habitat..."
That should be "peek".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
travalar
Animal Loving, Tree Hugging America Loving Liberal
11:56 PM on 05/21/2012
Sorry this is in it's basic form Newsprint. You can't think you have made a break through because you have found a spelling error.
07:24 AM on 05/22/2012
Not claiming superiority - just being pedantic.

By the way, that should be "its", not "it's".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
F Sz
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidenc
10:25 AM on 05/20/2012
They can only be 5000 years old. Ask Romney or Santorum about it.
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inspjoe
take two go to right
04:06 PM on 05/22/2012
i too was wondering when the religous right will try to de bunk this and keep saying earth is only 3000 yrs old
09:46 AM on 05/20/2012
KILL IT! KILL IT WITH FIRE!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WorkhelpWorkhelp
Control your money locally. Charter banks now.
03:18 AM on 05/21/2012
Just hit it with a cross.
12:22 PM on 05/21/2012
Nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.
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Lorindol
I shall consider it . . .
05:11 AM on 05/23/2012
F-ckin' A!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Akhet
Is kind of like 2Pac+Doctor Who
10:30 PM on 05/23/2012
Aaarrrrr, absolutely bada$$ess!!!
08:07 AM on 05/19/2012
The ocean deep is a mysterious domain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
charleslennon
Always ready for a good fight.
06:39 PM on 05/19/2012
Ever try to find a G-spot?
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BannedInBoston
Everyone is entitled to my opinion.
12:07 AM on 05/20/2012
Come to think, the procedure is somewhat similar....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
travalar
Animal Loving, Tree Hugging America Loving Liberal
11:57 PM on 05/21/2012
Ever try to make one do anything but be elusive?
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Ossit
Ossit
04:56 AM on 05/19/2012
Extremeophiles(pardon the spelling) who tenaciously hold on where it seems impossible in high temperature acidic water, in rock, mud. New location, old news.
08:01 AM on 05/19/2012
..and also bacteria that survive without air "anaerobic".
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Ossit
Ossit
04:16 PM on 05/19/2012
Oh my I forgot about them. Thanks for the reminder, ccgndy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FriendofPhish
The more we stick together... the happier we'll be
02:15 AM on 05/20/2012
like botulism...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:54 AM on 05/19/2012
How do you suppose they knew it was 86 milliom years and not 85 or even 80 million?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
silverspirit2011
05:06 AM on 05/19/2012
Rate of sedimentary growth. If more sediment falls, you will see more organic matter trapped in the layers. Then test the layers to see how much organic material is found. This gives a base line comparison which can be used against experimental data previously performed under lab condition's to date each layer.

Or potassium radiometric dating.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
travalar
Animal Loving, Tree Hugging America Loving Liberal
11:58 PM on 05/21/2012
Oh yeah sure. All those words in a certain order must make you feel smart or something.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:29 AM on 05/22/2012
Still doesn't prove anything. Those tests were invented in this century. You'd have to go back at least one million years to prove it. Why not just say a thousand years. No one who lived in that era could refute it either.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opinionator63
She blinded me with science!
08:53 PM on 05/18/2012
I really, really hope that we don't dig up some super-organism to which we have no immunity whatsoever, thereby causing our own extinction. Now I won't be able to sleep tonight! (kidding...).
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BannedInBoston
Everyone is entitled to my opinion.
11:57 PM on 05/19/2012
You wouldn't happen to be Michael Crichton, would you?...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rg9rts
Carpe Diem! This aint rehearsal
12:23 PM on 05/20/2012
X-Files as I recall.~~(^..^)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opinionator63
She blinded me with science!
04:04 AM on 05/21/2012
haha! I wish I had written his books and made his money!
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buminthesun421
As a matter of fact, I AM a wise-ass...
04:23 PM on 05/18/2012
This just goes to show you that if you don't keep your home free of mold, mildew, and various bacterias, it could last for 86 million years... and then you'll never get rid of it...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opinionator63
She blinded me with science!
08:54 PM on 05/18/2012
Oh great. Just don't let my mother see THIS article!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Susan Osterhout Troiano
When arguing, attack the issue, not the person.
01:11 PM on 05/20/2012
Or any other OCD person.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
Mississippi Red
Stoke City: ugly football that works
03:04 PM on 05/18/2012
Well, now, that's just crazy!

Shall we jam a pipe into Mars, now?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mech126
Science, and government are "NOT" the enemy...
05:08 PM on 05/19/2012
Why not, we bombed the moon for water...