Brightsurf Science News and Current Science News Events
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Scientists Find Bacteria Thriving on a Feast of Seafloor Rock

Scientists Find Bacteria Thriving on a Feast of Seafloor Rock

May 29, 2008

On the deep ocean floor, microbial life is feeding on fresh volcanic rock and flourishing with greater abundance than even the most optimistic scientists thought possible. According to a study published May 28 in the journal Nature, scientists have found bacteria growing on oceanic crust in concentrations that are thousands- to ten-thousand times (three to four orders of magnitude) greater than what is found in the overlying waters.

Researchers from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), the University of Southern California (USC), and four other institutions collected and examined rock and water samples from the East Pacific Rise, the Nankai Trough, the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, the Sargasso Sea, and the seafloor near Hawaii. They used various molecular and genetic analysis tools (such as quantitative polymerase chain reaction and clone libraries) to quantify the abundance, richness, and diversity of communities of bacteria living on young ocean crust.




What they found was a community of microbes-growing without light and eating rocks-that is as fertile and prodigious as what can be found in terrestrial farm soil. Such seafloor microbes have been detected before, but this is the first time that they have been quantified.

We were truly shocked to find microbial life thriving at the levels we observed," said Cara Santelli, a recent graduate of the MIT/WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography and now a postdoctoral scholar at Harvard University. Santelli conducted the research with geochemists Katrina Edwards and Wolfgang Bach while all three were in Woods Hole. Edwards is now at USC, while Bach has moved to the University of Bremen.

"Theoretical research by Edwards and Bach had suggested that life could exist in such a dark, cold, and rocky environment," said Santelli, lead author on the Nature paper. "The objective of our project was to provide tangible evidence. Not only was the biomass in seafloor lava greater than in the overlying seawater, but the bacterial diversity was significantly greater than we could have imagined."

The findings open up new questions about the evolution of Earth and of seafloor life.

"We are just beginning to scratch the surface," Santelli said. "What role does this microbial community play in global ocean chemistry? What sort of metabolism is needed to live in and dominate this environment? And what exactly are these microbes doing down there?"

The research by Santelli and Edwards, et al, was funded by the National Science Foundation's Ridge 2000 program, the NASA Astrobiology Institute, and Western Washington University.

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution



Related Oceanic Crust News Articles Oceanic Crust News and Current Oceanic Crust Events RSS Oceanic Crust News and Current Oceanic Crust Events RSS
X-rays use diamonds as a window to the center of the Earth
Diamonds from Brazil have provided the answers to a question that Earth scientists have been trying to understand for many years: how is oceanic crust that has been subducted deep into the Earth recycled back into volcanic rocks?

Geologists discover signs of volcanoes blowing their tops in the deep ocean
A research team led by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) has uncovered evidence of explosive volcanic eruptions deep beneath the ice-covered surface of the Arctic Ocean.

Bacteria 'Feed' on Earth's Ocean-Bottom Crust
Seafloor bacteria on ocean-bottom rocks are more abundant and diverse than previously thought, appearing to "feed" on the planet's oceanic crust, according to results of a study reported in this week's issue of the journal Nature.

Seismologists see Earth's interior as interplay between temperature, pressure and chemistry
Seismologists in recent years have recast their understanding of the inner workings of Earth from a relatively benign homogeneous environment to one that is highly dynamic and chemically diverse.

Geologists recover rocks yielding unprecedented insights into San Andreas Fault
For the first time, geologists have extracted intact rock samples from 2 miles beneath the surface of the San Andreas Fault, the infamous rupture that runs 800 miles along the length of California.

Scientists launch deep-sea scientific drilling program to study volatile earthquake zone
Today, the Nankai Trough Seismogenic Zone Experiment (NanTroSEIZE) gets underway, with the Japanese drilling vessel Chikyu departing from Shingu Port with scientists aboard, all ready to log, drill, sample, and install monitoring instrumentation in one of the most active earthquake zones on Earth.

Argon conclusion: Researchers reassess theories on formation of Earth's atmosphere
Geochemists at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute are challenging commonly held ideas about how gases are expelled from the Earth. Their theory, which is described in the Sept. 20 issue of the journal Nature, could change the way scientists view the formation of Earth's atmosphere and those of our distant neighbors, Mars and Venus.

Scripps/UCSD geophysicist among international team finding evidence of first plate tectonics
Identification of the oldest preserved pieces of Earth's crust in southern Greenland has provided evidence of active plate tectonics as early as 3.8 billion years ago, according to a report by an international team of geoscientists in the March 23 edition of Science magazine.

Ancient rocks show how young Earth avoided becoming giant snowball
A greenhouse gas that has become the bane of modern society may have saved Earth from completely freezing over early in the planet's history, according to the first detailed laboratory analysis of the world's oldest sedimentary rocks.

Scientists penetrate fossil magma chamber beneath intact ocean crust - achieving scientific 'first'
Approximately 800 km west of Costa Rica an international team of scientists aboard the research drilling ship JOIDES Resolution has¡-for the first time-recovered black rocks known as gabbros from intact ocean crust.
More Oceanic Crust News Articles
Collaborative research (USGS/GEOMAR/OSU): Onshore recording of offshore shots during the 1996 USGS/GEOMAR seismic survey of the Cascadia Margin
by Anne Martine Tre?hu



An Experimental Comparison of a Pin Stack to a Conventional Stack in a Thermoacoustic Prime Mover

This is a NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY CA report procured by the Pentagon and made available for public release. It has been reproduced in the best form available to the Pentagon. It is not spiral-bound, but rather assembled with Velobinding in a soft, white linen cover. The Storming Media report number is A730613. The abstract provided by the Pentagon follows: This thesis is an...



Mantle and Lower Crust Exposed in Oceanic Ridges and in Ophiolites: Contributions to a Specialized Symposium of the VII EUG Meeting, Strasbourg, Spring 1993 (Petrology and Structural Geology)

The processes involved in accretion taking place at oceanic ridges are approached here via petrological and structural analysis of oceanic rocks in present-day oceanic ridges, combined with similar studies based on ophiolites, and includes present cases of slow and fast oceanic spreading and inferred analogues in ophiolites. A complementary model study of cyclic oceanic activity reconciles...



The Oceanic Crust, from Accretion to Mantle Recycling: From Accretion to Mantle Recycling (Springer-Praxis Series in Geophysics)
by Thierry Juteau, Rene C. Maury

The last 30 years have been marked by a huge international effort to explore the deep sea floor, especially the mid-ocean ridge system. Thanks to the continuous development of new technologies and tools such as high-resolution multibeam sonar systems, sid e-scan sonars, deep submersibles and high-performance geophysical tools, these efforts have resulted in a much better knowledge of the...



Hydrogeology of the Oceanic Lithosphere

This wide-ranging and up-to-date review of the nature, causes, and consequences of fluid flow in oceanic crust analyzes much recent research. The accompanying CD includes a full and easily navigable set of diagrams and captions, references, and photos of research vessels, submersibles, and tools used in marine hydrologic...

Continental and oceanic crustal magnetization modelling a semiannual status report (SuDoc NAS 1.26:174125)
by C. G. A Harrison

Compressional to shear wave conversion in oceanic crust ([Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution contribution)
by Robert S White



Analysis of a Natural Convection/Thermosyphon Mechanism for Heat Rejection from Enclosures

This is a AIR FORCE INST OF TECH WRIGHT-PATTERSONAFB OH SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING report procured by the Pentagon and made available for public release. It has been reproduced in the best form available to the Pentagon. It is not spiral-bound, but rather assembled with Velobinding in a soft, white linen cover. The Storming Media report number is A224663. The abstract provided by the Pentagon follows:...

Magnetization of the oceanic crust TRM or CEM (SuDoc NAS 1.26:179896)
by C. A. Raymond

The geology of some Atlantic fracture zones, Caribbean escarpments and the nature of the oceanic basement and crust
by Paul Jeffrey Fox

© 2008 BrightSurf.com