Skip to main content

Secondary menu

User menu

  • Join
  • OR
  • Log In

MNN - Mother Nature Network

Saturday, May 18, 2013
SPECIAL FEATURES:
  • Leaderboard
  • Nest
  • TreeHugger
  • Photos
  • Blogs
  • SB 2013
  • Joy of Less

Search form

Social links

Main menu

  • Earth Matters
    • Browse all »
    • Animals
    • Weather
    • Energy
    • Politics
    • Space
    • Translating Uncle Sam
    • Wilderness & Resources
  • Health
    • Browse all »
    • Allergies
    • Fitness & Well-Being
    • Healthy Spaces
  • Lifestyle
    • Browse all »
    • Arts & Culture
    • Travel
    • Natural Beauty & Fashion
    • Recycling
    • Responsible Living
  • Green Tech
    • Browse all »
    • Computers
    • Gadgets & Electronics
    • Research & Innovations
    • Transportation
  • Eco-Biz & Money
    • Browse all »
    • Green Workplace
    • Personal Finance
    • Sustainable Business Practices
  • Food & Drink
    • Browse all »
    • Beverages
    • Healthy Eating
    • Recipes
  • Your Home
    • Browse all »
    • At Home
    • Organic Farming & Gardening
    • Remodeling & Design
  • Family
    • Browse all »
    • Babies & Pregnancy
    • Family Activities
    • Pets
    • Protection & Safety

Breadcrumb Navigation

MNN.COM › Green Tech › Research & Innovations
    x
  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Bookmark and ShareShare
  • Earn Points
    What's this?
New bacteria found in Antarctica's Lake Vostok
The findings still need to go through the peer review process for verification.

By

Elizabeth Howell, OurAmazingPlanet
Thu, Mar 07 2013 at 7:20 PM

Related Topics:

Antarctica, Research & Innovation, Science

Russia's Vostok Station, in a photograph taken during the 2000 to 2001 field season. (Photo: Josh Landis/National Science Foundation)

A new type of microbe has been found at a lake buried under Antarctica's thick ice, according to news reports. The find may unveil clues of the surrounding environment in the lake, according to scientists.
 
The bacteria, said to be only 86 percent similar to other types known to exist on Earth, was discovered in a water sample taken from Lake Vostok, which sits under more than 2 miles (3 kilometers) of Antarctic ice. The freshwater lakehas likely been buried, unaltered, under the ice for the past million years.
 
Russian scientists reportedly obtained the water samples in 2012 when they drilled all the way down to the lake's surface. They ran the bacteria's composition through a global database and were not able to find anything similar to its type. Scientists couldn't even figure out the bacteria's descendents.
 
"After putting aside all possible elements of contamination, DNA was found that did not coincide with any of the well-known types in the global database," said Sergey Bulat, a geneticist at the Saint Petersburg Institute of Nuclear Physics, in a quote attributed in media reports to RIA Novosti news service.
 
"We are calling this life form unclassified and unidentified," he added.
 
Understanding the environment
While the bacteria still needs to be confirmed, its potential is already drawing attention from other Antarctic scientists.
 
Life forms are shaped by the environment they live in, and often shape that environment in return. Finding out more about bacteria in Lake Vostok, therefore, will help researchers picture what living in the lake is like for these tiny microorganisms.
 
"The study of looking at the organisms and their environment is really the study of ecology," said Alison Murray, an associate research professor at the Desert Research Institute (an environmental research group based in Nevada) who also does Antarctic research herself.
 
"By learning more about the life forms that live in Vostok, that will probably teach us a bit about the lake itself," Murray told OurAmazingPlanet.
 
Murray, who is familiar with the Russian researchers' work, said the group is a "very careful team of scientists" who would have put the bacteria through several validity tests before releasing the news.
 
Understanding bacterial life on Earth is also considered a possible research direction for finding life on other planets, including Mars.
 
'If this is real, it is very exciting'
The 86 percent similarity figure, to Murray, is a plausible indicator that this could be a new type of bacteria. Since all Earthly life is related to each other in some way, anything below about 80 percent would draw concern, Murray added.
 
At least one other scientist, however, expressed caution about the finding, saying that more information is needed before drawing conclusions.
 
"If this is real, it is very exciting," Peter Doran, a microbiologist at the University of Illinois at Chicago, wrote in an e-mail to OurAmazingPlanet. He is a frequent visitor to the Arctic and Antarctica for his research.
 
"I would caution, though, that this type of 'press release' science is a little dangerous. It really needs to go through the rigor of peer review by other experts in the field before I'll jump on board," he said. "Having others looking at their methods and data will provide support for their conclusions."
 
Russian scientists successfully dug through to the buried lake again in January this year, retrieving more samples for later analysis.
 
Meanwhile, a British team had to call off their quest in December to dig to Lake Ellsworth, another Antarctic subglacial lake, after they encountered technical difficulties.
 
Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace. Follow OurAmazingPlanet @OAPlanet,Facebookand Google+.
 
Related on OurAmazingPlanet and MNN:
  • Gallery: Finding Life in a Buried Antarctic Lake
  • Antarctica: 100 Years of Exploration (Infographic)
  • Extreme Antarctica: Amazing Photos of Lake Ellsworth
  • MNN: 10 places on Earth that resemble alien planets
This story was originally written for OurAmazingPlanet and was republished with permission here. Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

You might also like:

Join the conversation

Sign in with one of these accounts to add your comment.
Log in or
create an account
  • Sign in using this account:

EDITORS' PICKS

tease kids in woods

line

tease stargazing

line

tease hand

Advertisement

TODAY'S MOST POPULAR ON

  1. 15 famous people who mysteriously disappeared
  2. 7 recipes featuring fresh fava beans
  3. How to clean brass naturally
  4. 13 natural remedies for the ant invasion
  5. Stone Age people may have battled against a zombie apocalypse
  6. Jon Stewart explains the ‘Monsanto Protection Act’
  7. Could your child survive alone in the woods?
  8. 12 best new features of the Samsung Galaxy S4
  9. 9 habits that may do more harm than good
  10. 5 healthy juicing recipes to refresh your routine
+ Add this to my site
From our sponsor
Civic Accelerator: A Platform for Social Entrepreneurship
A competition between 10 finalists, the program offers seed money for enterprises that inspire, more...
Reinventing the meeting
AltruHelp addresses 5 reasons millennials don't volunteer
The online social platform aims to boost flagging volunteer rates among this generation by making more...
Reinventing the meeting
BOULD housing project creates green ‘learning laboratories’
A Denver-based civic venture constructs high-quality green housing for low-income families while more...
Reinventing the meeting
Students use CareerVillage to get advice from real professionals
Young people from low-income communities submit career questions via the website and get answers more...
Reinventing the meeting
Generation Citizen strengthens democracy by empowering youth
Program partners college students with high schools to challenge the younger students to find more...
Reinventing the meeting

NEWSLETTER

Mother Nature. Delivered
Advertisement
Advertisement

Footer menu

  • Quick Links
    • Joy of Less
    • About Us
    • Advisory Board
    • Editors' Blog
    • Press
    • Privacy
    • Sitemap
    • Terms of Service
  • MNN Tools
    • Advice
    • Blogs
    • Day in History
    • Eco-glossary
    • Infographics
    • Lists
    • Photos
    • Videos
  • Connect
    • The Nest
    • Contact Us
    • Mixed Greens
    • Newsletters
    • RSS
    • Social
    • TreeHugger
    • Mobile
  • Channels
    • Earth Matters
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Green Tech
    • Eco-Biz & Money
    • Your Home
    • Family
    • State Reports
  • Follow MNN
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Tumblr
    • Google+
    • StumbleUpon

Copyright © 2013 MNN Holdings, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Website by GLICK INTERACTIVE | Powered by CIRRACORE

SPONSORS