Ready... set... GO!
From the expected Yaks and Goats to astonishing snakes and spiders, part 1 covered the incredible lengths animals will go to survive in extreme locations, either by accident like the snakes, or to exploit a niche with no competition.
The jumping spider came out on top, approaching almost the peak of the Himalayas, but as always, the smaller we go, the more extreme we get. Spiders aren't the end of the story.
Spiders
Ok, to get an idea of where we're going next, we need to continue with spiders. Many spiders (Ugh I've said 'spider' in my head so much that it sounds weird now)have a wonderfully disturbing commute technique called ballooning, or kiting. Basically, they release some silk threads that act as a wind catcher, pulling them into the air to travel along the currents to a new, exciting unknown.
Typically, these spiders such as some crab spiders will only drift off for a few metres, but occasionally they get caught in an updraft or jet stream and get themselves on a first class flight to... up. Ballooning spiders have been found thousands of feet in the air, and even thousands of kilometres out at sea away from any land, being caught on ships' sails and so on. This is very likely how the Himalayan spiders managed to end up living so high in the first place.
A whole family of spiderlings launching into the air
But these are not the only creatures that make use of wind power. Moth caterpillars and spider mites also use this trick, and aphids that have been seen at least 2.5 kilometres high in jet streams over England can be a major pest problem, spreading all over the place where nobody can stop them. These creatures evidently evolved the trick separately, meaning this method of dispersal is a pretty successful technique - despite the inevitable mortality rate that comes with random launching into the air.
Spiders, however, do take the crown for the height and length of these trips, but they don't typically spend much time up there, and it's not that high compared to the Himalayan bumble bees or yaks anyway. But. Other life takes this whole wind dispesal a step further:
Aeroplankton
This actually exists
Yep, there's a name for a whole ecosystem of life beyond the mountain peaks, studied by aerobiologists. Life high up in the atmosphere includes:
...viruses, about 1000 different species of bacteria, around 40,000 varieties of fungi, and hundreds of species of protists, algae, mosses and liverworts.
Never underestimate the little guys, eh? And they aren't exactly rare either. Some scientists counted 5,100 bacterial cells, crossing over 300 families with over 60% still living and thriving, per cubic metre floating over the Caribbean.
Plant pathologist Andrew Schuerger is one of many exploring the life above us, and using NASA's ER-2 aircraft, he and his team managed to scoop up bacteria and fungi chilling out 20km above sea level. For perspective, the previous champion jumping spiders hide away in rocks barely 6.5km up. To top it off, actual living microbes have been recovered from 41km up in the part of the atmosphere we call the stratosphere.
But can they go higher?
The answer at this point is we don't know. But, as mentioned in the previous post, at a certain heights, things actually get warmer than in the thicker atmosphere below, and there is indeed a band of atmosphere called the stratopause (the band above the stratosphere and below the mesosphere) that is kind of like an altitude oasis partly thanks to aerosol particles that absorb solar radiation. Temperatures are still a nasty 0°C, but that's far warmer than below and above.
Note how the temperature fluctuates, indicated on the left
Trying to figure out the limits, Schuerger experimented with the common bacteria Serratia liquefaciens, and even a species found frozen in the permafrost of Siberia, Carnobacterium. He put them under even more unforgiving pressures and temperatures than the stratopause in an oxygen-free environment and found them to survive just fine - even continuing to grow. But this does not account for UV radiation which could destroy DNA of any potential microbes living this high (50-55km!).
The technology is on the brink of production to properly go up there and scoop some life up via NASA's E-MIST balloon or other upcoming techniques.
As usual, I wasn't...quite... satisfied with this. Most of this news came from 2013 and was very speculative as to the hows. So I did a little more digging and found a study from June this year looking at how certain bacteria survive UV stress so well You can find it available here.
Data from this study looked at one bacteria, Rhodobacter sp., a type of photoheterotrophic bacteria.
These organisms use light for energy, but cannot use carbon dioxide as their sole carbon source. They use organic compounds from the environment.
The results found that this bacteria had the ability to use different types of energy to find solutions to UV induced oxidative stress. The research also suspects that mutagenicity - the ability to use the chemical agent mutagen to advance DNA mutation - played a part in physical DNA protection and antioxidant osmoprotectants.
Phew, a lot of vocabulary. Basically, bacteria have clearly found ways to protect against and repair damage from harsh, upper atmosphere radiation. This combined with Andrew Schuerger's research into their ability to survive cold, oxygen-less, low pressure atmospheres means I personally have confidence that microbes can and will be found over 50km above earth.
If so, this leads into a whole new speculative topic; Panspermia, the potential of microbial life 'seeding' other planets. With billions of bacteria potentially skirting the edges of our planet, it only takes some solar wind or bits of meteor to smash into them, pushing them beyond the escape velocity of earth and into deep space (something that I already reported on as a real area of study a couple of weeks ago)
Questions about how these organisms survive, high above against all odds are still plentiful, but understanding them may lead to numerous drugs and other medical applications such as... super effective sun cream? At the same time, a greater understanding of how pests - and even disease - can potentially spread is of utmost importance. Give a nod to the wonders of extremophiles, but an even bigger nod to those scientists trying to understand them!
Thanks for reading! If you want to read more science on Steemit, use the Steemstem tag and join us geeks on Steemit.chat!
All images CC0 licensed
Sources: Ballooning | High Altitude Aphids | Ballooning Caterpillars | Types of microbes high up
Can these creatures survive in deep space if the chance of something taking them from earth does happen to occur?
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Up for debate! Tardigrades and other bacteria have evidently been shown to survive the vacuum of space, exposed to all the radiation and so on, and bacteria have numerous mechanisms to hibernate for extended periods without oxygen or water... it's real enough that a huge priority for NASA is not to 'contaminate' planets and moons they explore. It's very possible!
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Coincidentally I just read about tardigrades and its ability to turn itself to glass to survive. wanted to make a post about it as I find it extremely fascinating. Contamination is possible, also they run a risk of bringing down parasites/organisms (I would like to think that this is a possibility) from there to here.
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Yep! If life can be knocked out of orbit here, why not there? Creepy to think about...
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That's a rabbit hole we've found ourselves already into :)
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It is actually a fascinating subject. How this tiny creatures survive Making conscious use of some features is awesome.
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Well 'conscious' is an interesting thing. I forgot how they officially word but an imitated trait or skill can potentially be passed down epigenetically, such as the fear of a fox, without being encoded in DNA. It's possible the ballooning spides for example, may have just imitated each other and the successful ones left a genetic tag, rather than telling each other consciously.
It's something I need to read up on more, but pretty cool either way!
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@eurogee, I do agree with you on that one.
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Hmm. Okay, now I'm really intrigued. This be the first time i got to hear about floating bacteria and "Perspermia". Seems quite possible since they've been known to withstand pretty harsh conditions. Yet I'm trying to imagine "space". What are the odds of survival?
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Well a tardigrade is the only animal that can survive outer space, that we know, but bacteria appear to be pretty damn good at it, and NASA is really having some issues lol. For example, the 'Bacillus pumilus' and 'Bacillus subtilis' survived for 18 months outside the space station, and some bacteria trapped in ice on earth for millions of years were resurrected and taken out there, surviving long enough even for a trip to Europa and back.
So i'd say the odds are pretty good!
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Incredible! Do they serve any purpose? Plankton as a food makes more sense then Aeroplankton. And question is why aren't there animals that would feed with it/them. Organism usually adapts to environment if there is food.
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I don't think aeroplankton is a food service really, but more a happy accident as a means of dispersal only. I do wonder if many organisms deliberately live up there to actually make use of the lack of atmosphere, but I haven't ready anything on that yet. It seems for the most part, the organisms got trapped up there by mistake but some managed to survive and pass on those survival genes, and the rest is history!
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Interesting overview on the subject of spiders and other organisms as extremophiles. Some of these wee guys put into perspective how fragile we as humans are, but how we could potentially exploit their abilities to our own advantage. Thanks
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Yep, a lot of potential there. Thanks for reading =)
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These creatures are more than just animal at times people tend to underestimate them and that is why they thrive till today
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Yep, wait until when I post about the next location! Gets even crazier
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Cool post, i never knew spiders were that cool. Honestly, when i read Aeroplankton i immediately pictured the Plankton from Spongebob flying :D
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haha maybe they exist...
Spiders are crazy. I've written numerous posts about them, from spiders that live their whole lives underwater in pockets of air they collect, to how they avoid getting stuck on their webs or a tiny spider capable of making a 25-metre wide web in a day... there's just no end to them!
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thats amazing
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great work on the documentation and research, keep it up!
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Aeroplanktons.... I don't really know them but the name caught my attention. A simple Google Search shows they are tiny lifeforms that float in the air and are carried by the wind's current....
I love this post, you seem to have a reservoir for these researches...
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It's called my braiiinnnnnn mixed with curiosity and free time
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Hi. I think the spiders are awesome but creepy, as I read about them when I was a kid and got kind of terrified of the idea of spiders flying as I really disliked spiders already back then.
The aeroplankton sounds really interesting and I have never heard anything about them and I have never even thought of anything like that. This points out not only the limits of knowledge but the limits of imagination as I somehow did not even think something like this could be possible even though there are far more bizarre things in the world.
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It's crazy right? In one experiment, they managed to catch a single termite from a plane, 19,000 feet in the air lol. 6 billion creatures pass overhead any given spot per month in England, more towards the south. Sometimes we really just gotta stop and look around and just get our minds blown!
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It is. This is something I really need to tell my friends who have talked about moving into the mountains to avoid any unnecessary contact with spiders or insects. I do believe quite many insects and animals and different life forms are capable of living in truly extreme conditions we can't believe they are living in.
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