2019
DOI: 10.31223/osf.io/8eay6
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Living at the Extremes: Extremophiles and the Limits of Life in a Planetary Context

Abstract:

Prokaryotic life has dominated most of the evolutionary history of our planet, evolving tooccupy virtually all available environmental niches. Extremophiles, especially those thrivingunder multiple extremes, represent a key area of research for multiple disciplines, spanningfrom the study of adaptations to harsh conditions, to the biogeochemical cycling of elements.Extremophile research also has implications for origin of life studies and the search for life onother planetary and celestial bodies. In this a… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(30 citation statements)
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References 235 publications
(314 reference statements)
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“…However, our inability to detect microbes or microbial activity in certain soils suggests that these surface soils represent a limit to microbial activity and survival driven by the cold, dry, and salty environmental conditions. This phenomenon is supported by previous work performed elsewhere in Antarctica (8) and is a different type of "limit to life" than what might be found in a hot, acidic environment (4,43). Acknowledging that certain Antarctic soils may be uninhabited will allow us to better understand the adaptations that allow organisms to survive and remain active in these unique, challenging environments and predict what other soils on Earth may be similarly uninhabited.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 69%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, our inability to detect microbes or microbial activity in certain soils suggests that these surface soils represent a limit to microbial activity and survival driven by the cold, dry, and salty environmental conditions. This phenomenon is supported by previous work performed elsewhere in Antarctica (8) and is a different type of "limit to life" than what might be found in a hot, acidic environment (4,43). Acknowledging that certain Antarctic soils may be uninhabited will allow us to better understand the adaptations that allow organisms to survive and remain active in these unique, challenging environments and predict what other soils on Earth may be similarly uninhabited.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 69%
“…These soils have generally been unaffected by direct anthropogenic impacts (14) and are often very isolated (15,16). Even if microbes can be dispersed to remote soil patches via aeolian transport (16), they often face a unique combination of cold temperatures, extremely low soil water potentials, and high salt concentrations that restrict the activity and survival of all but a few specifically adapted taxa (4,8). It seems likely that some isolated Antarctic soils may have remained effectively uninhabited by microbes due to these constraints.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are many described extremophiles that may survive in environments that are extreme to human or animal life (e.g. extremes of temperature or pressure) but do not survive under conditions in our normal habitat (Merino et al 2019). Thus, it is plausible that any Martian microbe, after it arrives on Earth, would not be viable on Earth due to a lack of its required Martian nutritional and environmental conditions.…”
Section: Working Group Discussion Topics and Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[33][34][35][36] On the opposite, the cold temperature environments may have played a crucial role in the origin of life given that some psychrophiles can also tolerate high salt concentrations that make them halo-psychrophiles. 37 Assuming that some prebiotic chemistry has emerged in separate conditions from the RNA world, a cold and radiation-shielded environment has been proposed for the origin of life before the emergence of a mesophilic LUCA. 38 For the same reasons, high-pressure conditions in deep regions of the Earth (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%