Scientists Discover Thousands of New Microbes Lurking in The Ocean's Deepest Zone
Just 6 kilometers (about 4 miles) of briny water separate the ocean's surface from the depths known as the hadal zone. Yet for as much as we know what lurks in its cold darkness, it might as well be another world.
The life that flourishes down there is also downright alien. A new study has recovered a plethora of never-before-seen microbes from areas of the ocean floor that include the Mariana Trench. Analyzing their alien methods for survival could give biologists a whole new bank of resources to use in everything from medicine to evolutionary research.
The hadal zone starts 6 kilometers (3.7 miles) deep, and goes down as far as 11 kilometers (6.8 miles). That lower limit is almost 30 Empire State Buildings, or around one-and-a-quarter Mount Everests. It's deep.
Researchers from institutions across China took 33 dives into the hadal zone with a manned submersible, collecting samples of sediment and seawater. Subsequent analysis identified 7,564 microbe species, of which nearly 90 percent were new to science.
"Our study focuses on a long-standing goal in microbial ecology: elucidating how environments shape microbial communities, especially in extreme conditions," write the researchers in their published paper.
Life is far from easy in the hadal zone. Temperatures are close to freezing, the water pressure is immense, and there's very little in the way of nutrients to snack on.
With that in mind, the diversity of species was surprising.
The microbes the researchers discovered generally applied one of two survival strategies. Some had smaller, simpler genomes, evolved for efficient living. These microbes showed evidence of enzymes designed to resist the stresses of living at such depths.
Other microbes were found to have larger genomes – not built for efficiency but for versatility. This makes them better able to adapt to environmental pressures, and to be able to survive off a wider range of matter for sustenance.
"Extraordinarily high novelty, diversity, and heterogeneity were observed in the hadal microbiome, especially among prokaryotes and viruses, which are impacted by both the broader context of extreme environmental conditions as well as the delicate topography in the hadal zone," the researchers note in an editorial accompanying their paper.
The microbes also tend to find suitable nooks and crannies in the depths of the ocean and stick to them: each of the sample sites visited by the researchers had their own particular mix of microbes, with little overlap between them.
At lower depths, cooperation seems to be more important for microbe survival, with these tiny organisms sharing nutrients and showing behaviors that benefit the community as a whole (including forming protective biofilms).
The research team has made its findings available online for other scientists to dig into, under the title of the Mariana Trench Environment and Ecology Research (MEER) project – adding to our understanding of how life survives in extreme conditions, and opening up new research opportunities in biotechnology.
"These findings indicated that environmental factors drive the high taxonomic novelty in the hadal zone, advancing our understanding of the ecological mechanisms governing microbial ecosystems in such an extreme oceanic environment," write the researchers.
The research has been published in Cell.
Remarkable Drone Footage Reveals How Narwhals Use Their Tusks
Largest Insect on Earth Headed For Extinction Thanks to Our Love of Chocolate
The Sun's Activity Can Trigger Earthquakes, And Now We Know How

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
12-03-2025
- Yahoo
Virginia Beach man's world record gum wrapper chain, 23 miles long and growing, a 60-year obsession
Gary Duschl has always been a collector. Inside his Virginia Beach residence, small dog and cat statues sit upon most of the surfaces. Dozens of antique glass bottles line some of his shelves. By the time he was 25, he had traveled across the United States to collect all of the Superman comics. But Duschl's greatest collection sticks out. For the past 60 years, Duschl has chained together more than 2.9 million gum wrappers into a single chain. Each wrapper is ripped in two, folded six times, and then inserted into another. The chain, which is held in 21 plexiglass display cases inside its own special room, is just over 23 miles, or 122,066 feet. That's three times longer than the Tide light rail. It's also 407 football fields, four Mount Everests and 83 Empire State Buildings. If walking at a leisurely pace, Duschl estimated it would take about eight hours to cover the chain's length. Though he doesn't chew gum anymore, Duschl doesn't need to ask friends and family for their post-chew trash. He's often sent wrappers directly from Wrigley, and gum enthusiasts around the world have sent their wrappers, as well. Now in his 70s, Duschl has no interest in stopping. Duschl weaves about 5½ feet of new wrapper chain — the height of his wife — a night while watching television. 'These are the only tools I use,' Duschl said, wriggling his fingers. On Tuesday, land surveyors from Precision Measurements Inc. were at Duschl's home to update his world record with the Guinness Book of World Records. The team started at 8:30 a.m. and spent several hours validating the chain's length, measuring 1,000-foot chunks every 19 minutes. 'I've surveyed bridges, tunnels, nothing like this. This is very different,' said Chris Taylor, one of the surveyors. 'It's unbelievable.' With Taylor on one end of the upstairs hall and Ivan Lineberry, another surveyor, on the other, they used a binder clip to mark every 25 feet of gum wrappers, followed by a pink flag every 1,000 feet. Specifically, surveyors were only measuring Duschl's last five years of chain, since he had it last measured for the world record in 2020. This year also marks the 60th year of the chain's existence, so Duschl wanted to officially commemorate the benchmark. The previous record, set in 1994 by a Washington woman, was only 7,400 feet, according to the Guinness Book of World Records. 'I was just doing it because I like doing it,' he said of folding the wrappers. 'One day, my wife and I went into the Niagara Falls Ripley's Believe It or Not, and they had (a chain) all over the ceiling. It said 'giant gum wrapper chain.' My wife touched me, and she said, 'You better do something about that.'' Duschl said he met with one of the Ripley's administrators shortly after to discuss his own gum wrapper chain. At the time, Duschl said his gum wrapper chain was much more moveable, so he brought it to the meeting to potentially have it displayed. 'I showed it to him, and he said, 'That's impressive, but there is a Guinness record that's longer than your chain,'' Duschl recalled. 'I just went crazy. Now, the work is on.' Like a tangible timeline, the chain showcases the passage of time for the Wrigley brand. Gum-related posters and Wrigley advertisements cover the wall, and large cases hold cups, buttons and even a pack of Juicy Fruit from 1895. Inside the room's closet, boxes full of gum wrappers directly from Wrigley wait to be added to the chain. Over the years, Duschl said the quality of wrapper has gotten much better for folding, making for a stronger chain. Duschl's chain has been featured on TV shows and in dozens of record and oddity-related books (another collection of his). He receives partial chains of wrappers from around the world, but he prefers to claim full ownership wrappers. 'I enjoy doing it, and we'll keep doing it until I reach my next goal, which is the marathon length (of 26.2 miles),' Duschl said. 'That's going to take three more miles, and this last three miles took me five years, but I am slowing down. I just don't go as fast as they used to anymore, but the record is in sight.' Eliza Noe,
Yahoo
06-03-2025
- Yahoo
Scientists Discover Thousands of New Microbes Lurking in The Ocean's Deepest Zone
Just 6 kilometers (about 4 miles) of briny water separate the ocean's surface from the depths known as the hadal zone. Yet for as much as we know what lurks in its cold darkness, it might as well be another world. The life that flourishes down there is also downright alien. A new study has recovered a plethora of never-before-seen microbes from areas of the ocean floor that include the Mariana Trench. Analyzing their alien methods for survival could give biologists a whole new bank of resources to use in everything from medicine to evolutionary research. The hadal zone starts 6 kilometers (3.7 miles) deep, and goes down as far as 11 kilometers (6.8 miles). That lower limit is almost 30 Empire State Buildings, or around one-and-a-quarter Mount Everests. It's deep. Researchers from institutions across China took 33 dives into the hadal zone with a manned submersible, collecting samples of sediment and seawater. Subsequent analysis identified 7,564 microbe species, of which nearly 90 percent were new to science. "Our study focuses on a long-standing goal in microbial ecology: elucidating how environments shape microbial communities, especially in extreme conditions," write the researchers in their published paper. Life is far from easy in the hadal zone. Temperatures are close to freezing, the water pressure is immense, and there's very little in the way of nutrients to snack on. With that in mind, the diversity of species was surprising. The microbes the researchers discovered generally applied one of two survival strategies. Some had smaller, simpler genomes, evolved for efficient living. These microbes showed evidence of enzymes designed to resist the stresses of living at such depths. Other microbes were found to have larger genomes – not built for efficiency but for versatility. This makes them better able to adapt to environmental pressures, and to be able to survive off a wider range of matter for sustenance. "Extraordinarily high novelty, diversity, and heterogeneity were observed in the hadal microbiome, especially among prokaryotes and viruses, which are impacted by both the broader context of extreme environmental conditions as well as the delicate topography in the hadal zone," the researchers note in an editorial accompanying their paper. The microbes also tend to find suitable nooks and crannies in the depths of the ocean and stick to them: each of the sample sites visited by the researchers had their own particular mix of microbes, with little overlap between them. At lower depths, cooperation seems to be more important for microbe survival, with these tiny organisms sharing nutrients and showing behaviors that benefit the community as a whole (including forming protective biofilms). The research team has made its findings available online for other scientists to dig into, under the title of the Mariana Trench Environment and Ecology Research (MEER) project – adding to our understanding of how life survives in extreme conditions, and opening up new research opportunities in biotechnology. "These findings indicated that environmental factors drive the high taxonomic novelty in the hadal zone, advancing our understanding of the ecological mechanisms governing microbial ecosystems in such an extreme oceanic environment," write the researchers. The research has been published in Cell. Remarkable Drone Footage Reveals How Narwhals Use Their Tusks Largest Insect on Earth Headed For Extinction Thanks to Our Love of Chocolate The Sun's Activity Can Trigger Earthquakes, And Now We Know How


USA Today
23-10-2024
- USA Today
Giant meteorite that hit Earth 3 billion years ago may have helped life thrive: Study
When a gargantuan space rock, estimated to be the size of four Mount Everests, crashed into Earth more than 3 billion years ago, many may assume that it would have wreaked havoc on a young planet. After all, that's what happened much more recently – just a few short 66 million years ago, to be exact – when a massive asteroid slamming into Earth is believed to have caused catastrophic devastation and wiped out the dinosaurs. But Harvard researchers found that something much more unlikely happened when a meteorite nicknamed S2 paid a visit to our planet. Instead of ending life, the space rock may have allowed it to thrive and grow. That doesn't mean its collision with Earth wasn't cataclysmic. What would it have been like to experience such an impact? Nadja Drabon, assistant professor of Earth and planetary sciences at Harvard University, explains it like this: 'Picture yourself standing off the coast of Cape Cod, in a shelf of shallow water. It's a low-energy environment, without strong currents," Drabon said in a statement. "Then all of a sudden, you have a giant tsunami sweeping by and ripping up the sea floor." Drabon, the lead author of the new study describing the aftermath of S2, recently led a team that visited the impact site in the Barberton Makhonjwa Mountains of South Africa to hunt for geological evidence of the collision. Here's what to know about the team's findings, published Monday in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Evidence of impact found at Barberton Greenstone Belt The Barberton Makhonjwa Mountains are home to a geologic formation known as the Barberton Greenstone Belt where eight impact events, including the S2 meteoritic impact, have occurred. That's where Drabon and her students conducted fieldwork – hiking into mountain passes to collect and examine rock samples embedded in the ground and preserved in Earth's crust. The sedimentary samples contained chemical signatures hidden in thin layers of rock that helped Drabon and her students paint a picture of the tsunamis and other cataclysmic events S2 wrought. S2 impact allows bacteria life to flourish The aftermath of space rocks crashing into Earth usually conjure associations with the gigantic object known as the Chicxulub impactor, which ushered in the end of the dinosaurs when it crashed in modern day Mexico on the Yucatán Peninsula. But dinosaurs were still a long time away from roaming Earth when S2 crashed down about 3.26 billion years ago. The meteorite was estimated to have been up to 200 times larger than the extinction-inducing Chicxulub asteroid. That massive size made it plenty large enough to trigger a devastating tsunami that mixed up the ocean and flushed debris from the land into coastal areas. The crash into Earth also heated the atmosphere, boiled off the topmost layer of the ocean and blanketed the planet in a cloud of dust making photosynthetic activity impossible. But the impact also carried a silver lining. 'We think of impact events as being disastrous for life,' Drabon said in a statement. 'But what this study is highlighting is that these impacts would have had benefits to life, especially early on, and these impacts might have actually allowed life to flourish.' The iron that was likely stirred up deep in the ocean into shallow waters provided a food source that allowed hardy bacteria life to rebound quickly, according to Drabon's findings. As a result, populations of unicellular organisms spiked. Drabon and her team plan to visit the area again to continuing probing for clues about how the meteorite shaped Earth's history. Eric Lagatta covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. Reach him at elagatta@