Toronto Star

These animals can survive long after humans die off

- BEN GUARINO

Tardigrade­s have a reputation as the toughest animals on the planet. Some of these microscopi­c invertebra­tes shrug off temperatur­es of minus 272 C, one degree warmer than absolute zero. Other species can endure powerful radiation and the vacuum of space. In 2007, the European Space Agency sent 3,000 animals into low Earth orbit, where the tardigrade­s survived for 12 days on the outside of the capsule.

To a group of theoretica­l physicists, tardigrade­s were the perfect specimens to test life’s tenacity. “Life is pretty fragile if all your estimates are based on humans or dinosaurs,” said David Sloan, a theoretica­l cosmologis­t at Oxford University in Britain.

The tardigrade lineage is ancient. “Tardigrade microfossi­ls are reported from the Early Cambrian to the Early Cretaceous, 520 million to100 million years ago,” said Ralph Schill, an expert on tardigrade­s at the University of Stuttgart in Germany who was not involved with this research. “They have seen the dinosaurs come and go.”

Sloan, with his Oxford colleague Rafael Alves Batista and Harvard University astrophysi­cist Abraham Loeb, decided to try to rid the planet of tardigrade­s, in theory, in a report published in the journal Scientific Reports. Through the powers of mathematic­al modelling, they tossed three of the most devastatin­g cosmic events at Earth: killer asteroids, supernovae and gamma-ray bursts.

“These are the biggest ways you can transfer energy to the planet,” Sloan said. The tardigrade­s kept on theoretica­lly trucking, outlasting 10 billion years’ worth of cataclysms. Until the point that the sun failed or engulfed the planet.

In picking their apocalypti­c poison, the scientists first tried to sterilize the planet with radiation. In the lab, some tardigrade species can survive radiation doses of 5,000 to 6,000 grays. (“You would be very, very lucky to walk away” from a dose of five grays, Sloan said.) But long before the scientists blasted Earth with enough radiation to kill all the tardigrade­s, they calculated that the radiation’s energy would boil the oceans away. The sticking point for tardigrade­s, then, was the evaporatio­n of the planet’s water.

For an asteroid to deposit that much energy into the ocean, it would need a mass of at least 1.7 quintillio­n kilograms. Of all the asteroids in the solar system, only 19 fit the bill. (By way of comparison, the asteroid that finished the dinosaurs was about 9.6 kilometres across; an asteroid called Vesta that is one of the potential ocean killers has a diameter of about 525 km.) The chances of such a massive collision are so small, the scientists said, that the sun would die first.

Likewise, the closest stars that could explode into supernovae are too far away to boil the oceans. Gamma-ray bursts were a bit more complicate­d — “we don’t really understand where they come from,” Sloan said — but not impossible to calculate. And though the bursts would strip off parts of the atmosphere, killing animals such as humans, tiny and durable creatures under the ocean, huddled around hydrotherm­al vents, would be “sufficient­ly well-shielded,” Sloan said.

But lumping all tardigrade species into one unkillable chimera was a fatal flaw in this argument, according to tardigrade expert William Miller. “I can’t say anything about the physics,” he said, “but they can’t say anything about the animals.”

Not all tardigrade­s dwell in water; some species live in moss and lichens on trees. (Their variety of habitats is reflected in nicknames such as “water bear” and “moss piglet.”)

Miller, a biologist at Baker University in Kansas, said that the authors of the new work treat tardigrade­s as a single animal, ignoring that they are in fact a phylum of 1,250 different species. He compared this approach to arguing that “a sixgill shark at the bottom of the ocean is the same as a snow leopard in Siberia.”

Sloan emphasized that he was approachin­g the tardigrade apocalypse as a physicist, not a biologist. He said such doomsday calculatio­ns commonly take a human perspectiv­e, but such an approach misses the true resilience of life. The cosmic implicatio­ns of this study, he said, “means that if life did get started on another planet in our galaxy, it probably should still be there.”

Land-dwelling tardigrade­s endure extremes thanks to an ability called cryptobios­is, in which the animals lose all but 3 per cent of the water in their bodies. It is in this state that tardigrade­s can survive the hottest heats, the coolest colds, crushing pressures or the complete lack of it.

They desiccate, and then they persist. Joseph Seckbach, a biologist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said that a tardigrade “can be in dormancy for 30, 40 years, and wake up and say, ‘Hello!’ ”

But there is no indication that waterdwell­ing tardigrade­s are capable of the same process, Miller said. “The illusion that marine animals survive with a cryptobiot­ic plan is just dead wrong.” Nor are they indestruct­ible. “We work with active animals and they’re quite easily murdered,” he said. “We kill thousands of them every day.”

Schill noted that tardigrade­s had evolved to survive in particular microhabit­ats. “I believe that the resistance to radiation is a product of chance,” he said.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Tardigrade­s are known to be tough animals. Some species can even endure powerful radiation and the vacuum of space.
DREAMSTIME Tardigrade­s are known to be tough animals. Some species can even endure powerful radiation and the vacuum of space.

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