The Denver Post

Old Faithful is the perfect home for these living things

- By Sarah Derouin

Yellowston­e National Park is a North American hot spot for wildlife. The park’s mountains, forests and meadows are home to the largest concentrat­ion of mammals in the lower 48 states, including the native bison and a restored population of gray wolves. Millions of visitors flock to the park each year, waiting for a glimpse of the diverse wildlife.

It turns out that other popular features at Yellowston­e — hydrotherm­al springs, pools and geysers that steam and bubble — are also a unique habitat for living things. Instead of charismati­c mammals and birds, they are home to chaos-loving microbes.

Scientists have long studied the hydrologic features of Yellowston­e’s springs and pools, “but nobody has ever studied the microbiolo­gy of a geyser,” said Eric Boyd, a professor of microbiolo­gy at Montana State University.

One reason they were ignored? Geysers are volatile. Old Faithful, a popular draw at Yellowston­e, erupts every 90 minutes or so, shooting boiling water 100 feet or more toward the sky. The water tumbles through the cold- by- comparison air, plunges, then sinks back into the hot pools below.

It was hard to comprehend that anything could survive this brutal cycle. But in research presented last week at the Geological

Society of America annual meeting, Boyd and colleagues showed that Yellowston­e’s geysers are perfect homes for some tiny creatures.

To test the waters, the team captured falling liquid during Old Faithful’s eruption. Back in the lab, the samples were doused with a chemical designed to make tiny microbes fluoresce.

“We saw cells, and that was really exciting,” said Lisa Keller, a doctoral candidate at Montana State. “But we needed to rule out that that wasn’t contaminat­ion because we’re catching water that’s flying through the air.”

After feeding the microbes and heating up the Old Faithful samples to their home temperatur­es, there was a flurry of activity at around 195 degrees Fahrenheit and a glimmer of action at 160 degrees. Keller explained that this showed the microorgan­isms were not only acclimated to the higher temperatur­es, but that they also preferred the heat.

The team used DNA testing to identify the microorgan­isms living in the vents and pools of the geyser. Thermocrin­is, a group of bacteria species that loves heat and converts chemicals to energy, made up more than 60% of the microbes at Old Faithful. Members of two other heat-loving microorgan­ism genuses, Thermus and Pyrobaculu­m, added to the plume’s microdiver­sity.

The researcher­s “correlated the different groups of microorgan­isms to different environmen­tal conditions, which is very cool,” said Alfonso Davila, an astrobiolo­gist at NASA Ames Research Center in California who was not part of the study. He said the work showed that a diverse microbiome could develop within a relatively small geyser system.

The team suggested that the diversity was driven by the dynamic environmen­t at Old Faithful, which provides everything that some microbes need to thrive: sulfur compounds, carbon and steamy water.

Supporting their hypothesis, Keller noted that calm pools with no turbulent eruptions had much less population- level biodiversi­ty than they saw in the geyser.

“The geyser is a hostile, inhospitab­le environmen­t. Yet, it’s almost like a cradle for biodiversi­ty,” Boyd said, adding that in the sulfurous, volcano-heated, carbon- dioxide-laden waters of Old Faithful, Thermocrin­is is “happy as a clam.”

And what about geysers beyond our home planet? Evidence of geysers on Saturn’s ice- covered ocean moon, Enceladus, and Jupiter’s moon Europa could host the conditions needed for microbes to prosper. Finding evidence off Earth is not far-fetched.

Discoverin­g life in Old Faithful helps astrobiolo­gists better understand life in such extremes, Davila said.

“The fact that life can grow on Earth in those particular conditions tells us something about the biological potential” in places like Enceladus, Europa or even Mars, he said.

While it may be many years before scientists get a look at potential evidence of life in those far- off worlds, here at home we have Yellowston­e, which Boyd said is home to half of the roughly 1,000 geysers in the world. And the more scientists study geysers in Yellowston­e and other parts of the world, the more they may find.

“I would put my money that any geyser we sample on Earth will support microbial life,” Boyd said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY LISA KELLER VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Microbes under the microscope from a sample of Old Faithful water, made visible by fluorescen­t dye that was added to the sample.
PHOTOS BY LISA KELLER VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Microbes under the microscope from a sample of Old Faithful water, made visible by fluorescen­t dye that was added to the sample.
 ?? ?? Instrument­s at the site of Old Faithful used to collect water samples from its geyser cone.
Instrument­s at the site of Old Faithful used to collect water samples from its geyser cone.

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