Press releases
03 April 2003
Hitchhiking Bacteria could compromise the detection of life on Mars
Is
there life on Mars? It's possible, but it may not Martian, say scientists. New
research, published in the open access journal BMC
Microbiology, suggests that conditions on Mars are capable of supporting
dormant bacteria, known as endospores. This raises concern about future attempts
to detect Martian life forms because endospores originating on Earth could
potentially hitch a ride to Mars and survive on its surface.
Soil on Mars is thought to be rich in oxidising chemicals that are known to
destroy life. The high levels of ultraviolet radiation on the surface of the
planet make it unlikely that any organism could survive. Ronald Crawford and
colleagues from the University of Idaho have investigated whether bacterial
endospores can exist in Mars's hostile environment.
Endospores are a survival form of bacteria, formed when they find themselves
in an unfavourable environment, and are perhaps the most resilient life form on
Earth. They are resistant to extreme temperatures, most disinfectants,
radiation, drying, and can survive for thousands of years in this dormant state.
There is even evidence that they can survive in the vacuum of space. Given the
possibility of endospores hitching a lift on spacecraft bound for Mars, Ronald
Crawford and his colleagues investigated whether endospores could survive in a
simulated Martian environment.
Martian soil was created by mixing dry sand containing endospores with
ferrate. The soil was then left at -20 oC and exposed to high levels of UV light
for six weeks. These conditions were designed to simulate the dry, cold,
oxidizing environment found on Mars. Subsequent analysis of the soil showed that
endospores were still alive below a depth of 5mm, suggesting that life is
possible in these hostile conditions.
The authors speculate, "that if entities resembling bacterial
endospores were produced at some point by life forms on Mars, they might still
be present and viable, given appropriate germination conditions."
Although the researchers have not found direct evidence for life on Mars
their research does throw up a potential problem with future space missions. The
survival of endospores in such adverse conditions raises the possibility that
bacterial endospores could travel to Mars on the surface of spacecraft and
survive on Martian soil. This could seriously compromise future efforts to
establish whether there is, or has been life on Mars, as it would be difficult
for researchers to know whether any endospores found originated from Earth or
Mars.
Whilst this work establishes that bacterial endospores can survive exposure
to the conditions probably found on Mars, it should be noted that it was not
possible to test whether their simulated Martian environment would kill
endospores over a geological timescale.
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Further Information:
This article in freely available in the open access, peer
reviewed journal, BMC Microbiology http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1471-2180-3-4.pdf
Please publish this URL in any news report so that your
readers will be able to read the original paper.
Contact one of the authors,
for further information about this research
Ronald
L. Crawford
Environmental Research Institute
and Department of Microbiology,
Molecular Biology & Biochemistry,
University of Idaho,
Moscow, USA
Email: crawford@uidaho.edu
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