News on Exobiology
- Will we ever find life somewhere?
- Organics formes easy in new planetary systems
- Building blocks of life generates naturally in comets
- Super-Earth unlikely able to transfer life to other planets
- New online SETILive service
- ESO finds life in space - on Earth
- Amoeba may offer key clue to photosynthetic evolution
- SETI-search focuses on Kepler-planets
- Earths atmosphere was NOT Methane-dominated
- Alien spaceprobes gone unnoticed?
- Exoligths could reveal alien civilisations
- "Sweet spots" for complex organic molecules
- Space is filled with conplex organic molecules
- Discovery of extreme amoeba
- Life threatening interstellar events
- Living in the galactic danger zone
- Alien life more likely on desert-planets
- Life from Earth caould have seeded the entire galaxy
- Doplhin-communication ideal for interstellar talk
- DNA building-blocks from space
- Meteorites may hold a toolkit for creating life
- How to find life in the Universe
- Asteroid served as "custom orders" of life-ingredients
- Evolution from microbes to mobile life
- SETI focuses on 86 Earthlike planets
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Life is not allways happiest with oxygen
Thursday, 06 January 2011 13:34
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| Astronomy - Exobiology / SETI |
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Early in life's history on Earth, the oceans became oxygen-rich. But new studies show that the oceans became anoxic 499 mio. years ago, and that this actually made life flourish The conventional view of the history of the Earth is that the oceans became oxygen-rich to approximately the degree they are today in the Late Ediacaran Period (about 600 million years ago) after staying relatively oxygen-poor for the preceding four billion years. But biogeochemists at the University of California, Riverside have found evidence that shows that the ocean went back to being “anoxic” or oxygen-poor around 499 million years ago, soon after the first appearance of animals on the planet, and remained anoxic for 2-4 million years. What’s more, the researchers suggest that such anoxic conditions may have been commonplace over a much broader interval of time, with their data capturing a particularly good example. “Our research shows the ocean fluctuated between oxygenation states 499 million years ago,” said co-author Timothy Lyons, a professor of biogeochemistry, whose lab led the research, “and such fluctuations played a major, perhaps dominant, role in shaping the early evolution of animals on the planet by driving extinction and clearing the way for new organisms to take their place.” Oxygen is a staple for animal survival, but not for the many bacteria that thrive in and even demand life without oxygen. Understanding how the environment changed over the course of Earth’s history can clue scientists to how exactly life evolved and flourished during the critical, very early stages of animal evolution. “Life and the environment in which it lives are intimately linked,” said Benjamin Gill, the first author of the research paper, who worked in Lyons’s lab as a graduate student. Gill explained that when the ocean’s oxygenation states changed rapidly in Earth’s history, some organisms were not able to cope. Further oceanic oxygen affects cycles of other biologically important elements such as iron, phosphorus and nitrogen. “Disruption of these cycles is another way to drive biological crises,” he said. “Thus both directly and indirectly a switch to an oxygen-poor state of the ocean can cause major extinction of species.” The researchers are now working on finding an explanation for why the oceans became oxygen-poor about 499 million years ago. “What we have found so far is evidence that it happened,” Gill said. “We have the ‘effect,’ but not the ‘cause.’ The oxygen-poor state persisted for 2-4 million years, likely until the enhanced burial of organic matter, originally derived from oxygen-producing photosynthesis, resulted in the accumulation of more oxygen in the atmosphere and ocean. As a kind of negative feedback, the abundant burial of organic material facilitated by anoxia may have bounced the ocean to a more oxygen-rich state.” Oxygen (O2) is supposed to be a primary bio-indicator in the search for life outside of our Solar-system, so the findings has great impact on the field of exo-biology Source: Unversity of Santa Cruz |




