Microbe Goo Could Help Guide the Search for Life on Mars – GWC Mag

Sticky substances secreted by microbes may help create landforms on Earth. And new research shows that these substances are more preserved in iron-rich sediment. Mars is decidedly iron-rich (it’s the Red Planet, after all), so the new study adds to evidence that microbe goo could help researchers explain landform creation there.

“I think this is going to open up a new direction for astrobiology.”

“I think this is going to open up a new direction for astrobiology,” said Alicia Rutledge, a researcher on the project and a geologist at Northern Arizona University.

Microbes secrete extracellular polymeric substances, or EPS, which have high cohesive strength. These substances serve mainly as a protective layer for microbes and a way to dispose of metabolic waste. “If you think of a slug leaving behind a trail of mucus, little microbial organisms will do that too,” said Natalie Jones, a doctoral student at Northern Arizona University leading the research. Those sticky microbes exist within virtually all sediment types on Earth.

Natalie Jones holds a biological soil crust from White Sands National Park’s dune field. A coating of EPS causes the sand grains to adhere to the cyanobacteria filaments. Credit: Natalie Jones

And that stickiness may be important in landform creation. Meandering rivers, for example, have strong banks. Scientists have generally thought that plant roots make these riverbanks stronger, but recent research has shown that some meandering river banks don’t have vegetation. EPS could be one of the materials that stabilizes the sediment, Jones said.

EPS are known to influence the formation of small landforms that are on the scale of millimeters to meters, said Jaco Baas, a process sedimentologist at Bangor University in the United Kingdom who was not involved in the research. For example, Baas’s experiments indicate that EPS change the dimensions of how ripples form in riverbeds.

Jones and her colleagues are working to understand how EPS may influence larger landforms on the scale of hundreds of meters to kilometers, such as meandering rivers, dunes, and shores or floors of lakes and oceans. Their studies in Iceland, New Mexico’s White Sands National Park, and other locations have identified correlations between the presence of EPS, erosion, mineralogy, and other factors. Preliminary results show that landforms with mafic mineralogy (those rich in iron oxides) contain more EPS. The group will present their results at AGU’s Annual Meeting 2023 in San Francisco.

The findings suggest that the presence of EPS could be particularly relevant for understanding landform development on Mars—a planet covered in red, iron-rich minerals.

Stickiness in Space

Further research into EPS could also aid in the search for life on the Red Planet. With better knowledge of how EPS influence landform development, scientists could use images of ancient landforms on the surface of Mars to estimate the chances that EPS existed in Martian sediment when those landforms were created. Those estimates could then help determine where a rover could look for other evidence of life, Jones said.

“How could microbial communities have stabilized these dunes in the past?”

“We’ve got sand dunes on Mars, and people have been trying to figure out for a while why so many seem frozen,” said Rutledge. “Are they frozen because there’s ice? Are they cemented with salts? There’s lots of theories out there and lots of hypotheses actively being tested. We’re going to throw another one in there: How could microbial communities have stabilized these dunes in the past?”

Before it’s possible to answer that question, scientists need “a lot more” evidence about where EPS are present on Earth, what factors influence the presence of EPS, and what sediment conditions must exist for EPS to influence sediment transport, Jones said.

Because of Mars’s reduced gravity, the cohesive strength of EPS relative to the weight of sediment particles would be greater than on Earth, meaning that even small amounts of EPS could be a significant factor in Martian landform creation, Jones said. “It’s entirely possible that even if we see no effect on landscapes here on Earth, that we could potentially see an effect on Mars,” she said.

EPS could also offer direct evidence of past life on Mars, but current remote sensing tools aren’t sensitive enough to detect EPS in Martian sediment. “There is quite a big gap between doing this type of research on Earth and trying to do it remotely on another planet,” Baas said. “But it’s exciting nonetheless.”

—Grace van Deelen (@GVD__), Staff Writer

8 December 2023: The article has been updated to clarify the coating on the White Sands biological soil crust sample.

This news article is included in our ENGAGE resource for educators seeking science news for their classroom lessons. Browse all ENGAGE articles, and share with your fellow educators how you integrated the article into an activity in the comments section below.

Citation: van Deelen, G. (2023), Microbe goo could help guide the search for life on Mars, Eos, 104, https://doi.org/10.1029/2023EO230468. Published on 8 December 2023.
Text © 2023. AGU. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.

Related posts

Forecasters expect slow start to U.S. wildfire season » Yale Climate Connections – GWC Mag

International Debt Is Strangling Developing Nations Vulnerable to Climate Change, a New Report Shows – GWC Mag

Plugging the Leak on Laundry Pollution – State of the Planet – GWC Mag