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Ancient Fungus 'Revived' In Lab (180-430,000K Years Old)
BBC ^ | 10-21-2004

Posted on 10/21/2004 3:50:58 PM PDT by blam

Ancient fungus 'revived' in lab

The fungi (blue streak) were isolated from deep sea sediments

Fungus from a deep-sea sediment core that is hundreds of thousands of years old can grow when placed in culture, scientists have discovered. Indian researchers say the fungi come from sediments that are between 180,000 and 430,000 years old.

The finding adds to growing evidence for the impressive survival capabilities of many microorganisms.

They are the oldest known fungi that will grow on a nutrient medium, the scientists say in Deep Sea Research I.

The core was drilled from a depth of 5,904m in the Indian Ocean's Chagos Trench.

Like other ocean trenches, it is oriented parallel to a volcanic arc and is one of the deepest regions of the Indian Ocean.

On board their research vessel, Dr Chandralata Raghukumar and colleagues from the National Institute of Oceanography in Goa, India, and the Indian Institute of Chemical Technology in Hyderabad carefully deposited 5cm-long portions of the core into plastic bags which they then sealed to avoid contamination with present-day microbes.

The scientists then attempted to isolate bacteria and fungi from the middle of the 5cm-long "subsamples", because this region had not been in contact with the pipe used to extract the core - and therefore any modern microorganisms on it.

Blown away

Diluted malt extract agar was used as a nutrient medium to grow the fungus on. The team was able to culture fungi from six out of 22 subsections of the core.

At core depths of between 15 and 50cm, the scientists found fungus of a type that does not produce spores.

At a depth of 160cm (corresponding to an age of 180,000 years ago) they found high densities of a type of spore-producing fungus known as Aspergillus sydowii.

Considerable densities of this fungus were also found at depths of 280-370cm, corresponding to an age between 180,000 and 430,000 years ago.

The researchers think the microbes may be blown off the land into the sea. They then sink to the sea floor and are covered in deep-sea ocean sediments.

The oldest microorganisms found alive are thought to be bacteria isolated from 25-40-million-year-old bees trapped in amber.

In 2000, US researchers claimed to have found bacteria that had remained in suspended animation for 250 million years in salt crystals. But the claim was disputed almost as soon as it was made.

Microbiologist Dr Scott Rogers, of Bowling Green State University in Ohio, US, was unsurprised by the study, saying his own team had obtained similar dates for ancient fungal organisms they had recovered in ice.

Viable and perhaps actively growing microorganisms are also thought to survive in the depths of Lake Vostok in Antarctica. If so, they may have been isolated from outside communities of microorganisms for up to one million years.

Studying the distributions and numbers of fungal organisms in cores could tell scientists about past climatic conditions on Earth, say the authors of the study.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ancient; antarctica; fungus; india; lab; lakevostok; revived; russia; thefungusamongus
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1 posted on 10/21/2004 3:51:05 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam

Wow. That was on some French cheese in the back of my refrigerator.


2 posted on 10/21/2004 3:52:04 PM PDT by RtWngr
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To: RtWngr

I thought that grew under french women's arms.


3 posted on 10/21/2004 3:53:51 PM PDT by pipecorp ("never know where you're going till you get there." the philosopher Insectus Harem)
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To: RtWngr

Great... now we have a new strain of atheletes foot fungi.


4 posted on 10/21/2004 3:54:56 PM PDT by 1stFreedom
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To: blam

Sounds like the set up for a Sci-Fi picture.


5 posted on 10/21/2004 3:56:07 PM PDT by BenLurkin (We have low inflation and and low unemployment.)
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To: blam

Is that what they sprayed on Edwards' hair the other day?


6 posted on 10/21/2004 3:56:08 PM PDT by sitewriter
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To: blam

Oh no!
There's goes Tokyo
Go. Go. Godzilla.

It's best to leave dead things alone.


7 posted on 10/21/2004 3:58:18 PM PDT by capitan_refugio
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To: blam
Fungus from a deep-sea sediment core that is hundreds of thousands of years old can grow when placed in culture

Helen Thomas and Frank Lautenberg immediately come to mind.
8 posted on 10/21/2004 3:58:45 PM PDT by Bars4Bill
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To: BenLurkin

"Sci-Fi picture"

Or reality special - "Andromeda fungi or What killed the Neaderthals?" Five contestants recieve sub-cutaneous injections and enter quarantine for one month. Who will survive?


9 posted on 10/21/2004 4:00:47 PM PDT by Socratic (Kerry/Edwards - Forging a New Reality)
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To: blam

There's a fungus among us.


10 posted on 10/21/2004 4:00:49 PM PDT by Crawdad (I cried because I had no shoes, until I met a man who had no class.)
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To: blam

"In the battle against athlete's foot, you've gotta have Tough Actin Tinactin"


11 posted on 10/21/2004 4:00:58 PM PDT by Buford T. Justice
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To: blam

Somehow this doesn't seem like a very good idea...


12 posted on 10/21/2004 4:02:37 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (Defeatists Suck)
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To: blam

Sheesh. Can we say "no natural immunity"?
Hope that puppy doesn't escape the confines of its lab. Yet, I'll wager Murphy's Law remains alive and well.


13 posted on 10/21/2004 4:03:35 PM PDT by Cooltouch
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To: AdmSmith

fungus amongus, pong


14 posted on 10/21/2004 4:05:30 PM PDT by nuconvert (Everyone has a photographic memory. Some don't have film.)
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To: EternalVigilance
Somehow this doesn't seem like a very good idea...

Yeah, the classic case of introducing a lifeform into an environment where it has no natural predators. That may not apply in this case, but it is the standard fear in this sort of thing.

15 posted on 10/21/2004 4:05:30 PM PDT by mikegi
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To: blam; PatrickHenry

Science marches on.


16 posted on 10/21/2004 4:10:14 PM PDT by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: Cooltouch

I don't buy science that is 90% guess work. That sample can be as little as 1000 years old depending on what activity took place. great pressure happens at such depths, depending on sediment and volcanic, seismic activity, flood water run off etc. it could be a fairly young sample, some Pygmies scraping fungus off his foot with a rock while fishing, tossed it overboard his canoe,
petrified wale poop.


17 posted on 10/21/2004 4:13:34 PM PDT by Nathan Zachary
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You understand that somehow this is going to turn bad, and it will all be Bush's fault


18 posted on 10/21/2004 4:14:49 PM PDT by What-to-do
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To: blam

BTTT


19 posted on 10/21/2004 4:15:20 PM PDT by Fiddlstix (This Tagline for sale. (Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: blam
Ancient Fungus 'Revived' In Lab (180-430,000K Years Old)

They call it....HELEN THOMAS.

20 posted on 10/21/2004 4:19:37 PM PDT by Angry Enough
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