Strange creatures wake up after more than 100 million years of sleeping on the ocean floor
No one knew this single-celled organism could live so long. Despite the unimaginable living conditions, they still exist.
Microorganisms were buried in the dust 101.5 million years ago, before Tyrannosaurus appeared on this planet. As time went on, continents shifted, oceans rose and fell, great apes appeared, and eventually humanity evolved with the curiosity and skill of digging through those ancient cells. In 2020, Japanese researchers brought single-celled organisms back to life.
Researchers aboard the drilling rig JOIDES Resolution collected samples of sediment from the ocean floor 10 years ago. The samples were taken from a depth of 100m below the 6,000m deep bottom in the South Pacific Ocean. It is an area with very few nutrients and oxygen reserves for organisms to survive. In this study, the scientists wanted to look for data on how microorganisms can survive in such a remote and inhospitable region.
These cells were found to have the ability to wake up in the presence of oxygen and nutrients.
"Our main question is whether life can survive in a nutrient-restricted environment or is this an uninhabited area," said scientist Yuki Morono from the Marine Science and Technology Agency. -Earth Japan said. "We also want to know how long microorganisms can sustain life in the near absence of food."
The results of the study show that cells found in sediment samples 101.5 million years ago have the ability to wake up in the presence of oxygen and nutrients. "I was skeptical at first, but then we discovered that up to 99.1% of bacteria in the sediment deposited 101.5 million years ago were still alive and ready to eat."
The bacteria have stopped all noticeable activity, but when it comes to nutrition and other vital needs, they become active again. To ensure the samples were not contaminated with modern microorganisms, the team opened the sediment in a highly sterile environment, selecting the microbial cells present and delivering nutrients to them through a small tube so as not to be contaminated with modern microorganisms.
The cells responded very quickly. They gobble up nitrogen and carbon. Within 68 days, the total number of cells had increased fourfold from the original 6,986 cells.
Aerobic (oxygen-breathing) bacteria are the strongest cells and they are most likely to wake up. These tiny creatures have survived thanks to tiny air bubbles that settle with sediment over geological periods. It seems that the metabolic rate of aerobic bacteria is very slow, enough for them to survive for such a long time.
The study was published in the journal Nature Communications on June 28, 2020.
- Explore the ocean
- Portrait of 'food transporter' for the ocean floor
- Video: The scenery on the ocean floor if the water is dry
- 10 giant animals on the ocean floor
- Bacteria sleep 100 million years in the Arctic Ocean
- Strange creatures on the ocean floor
- Detecting strange footprints near the ocean surface nearly 4km
- Discover 4 strange sea creatures with human-like teeth
- Ghosts lurk on the ocean floor
- Detect tremors in the deepest ocean
237 million year old strange creature revealed: Dinosaur impersonator? Can plants sing and communicate? The most impressive animal photos of 2021 Caught a strange pink creature in the sea, the whole boat quickly released it after knowing its origin The truth about the strange rabbit with horns like a deer Strangely, the stone 'grows' white hair by itself, more startled to know it costs billions of dong Detecting a population of mussels up to 100 years old on the American River The strangest parasites in the animal world