Karen Lloyd: The mysterious microbes living deep inside the earth -- and how they could help humanity
Karen Lloyd studies novel groups of microbes in Earth's deep surface biosphere, collecting them from disparate remote places such as Arctic fjords, volcanoes in Costa Rica, even deep in mud in the Marianas Trench Full bio
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on solid earth right now,
are crisscrossed by tiny little fractures
with astronomical quantities of microbes,
so far into the earth
yourself at the ground
and microbes would line your whole path.
about these microbes
about the microbes living in our guts.
and all the animals on the planet,
about 100,000 tons.
in our bellies every single day.
to the number of microbes
the entire surface of the earth,
our rivers and our oceans.
about two billion tons.
of microbes on earth
or sewage treatment plants.
inside the earth's crust.
these weigh 40 billion tons.
biomes on the planet,
until a few decades ago.
for what life is like down there,
pretty good deep subsurface samples
global coverage,
that these are the only places
it looks a little worse.
from only these samples,
in the subsurface, but ...
or my kid's guinea pigs,
aren't doing much of anything at all.
because there's so many of them.
at the rate of E. coli,
weight of the earth, rocks included,
even undergone a single cell division
around things that are so long-lived?
that I really love,
go there with me.
the life cycle of a tree ...
and we lived in winter,
with a leaf on it.
human generations
to a history book
that trees are always lifeless sticks
are just waiting for summer
than that of trees,
to this totally mundane fact.
subsurface microbes are just dormant,
trying to figure out how trees work?
for their version of summer,
for us to see it?
and seal it up in a test tube,
because they're starving.
also under starvation conditions,
culture of E. coli,
beat out the squeaky clean upstarts
an evolutionary payoff
being slow with being unimportant.
out-of-mind microbes
subsurface living.
to trickle down from the surface world,
of a picnic that happened 1,000 years ago.
for a lot of microbes in earth.
is for a microbe to just say,
that they need in order to survive
easier for them to get.
like nitrogen and iron and phosphorus,
kill each other to get ahold of
the problem is finding enough energy.
carbon dioxide molecules into yummy sugars
hit their leaves.
there's no sunlight,
for everybody else.
that's like a plant
that uses chemicals -- "chemo,"
with a ton of different elements.
iron, manganese, nitrogen, carbon,
pure electrons, straight up.
off of an electrical cord,
from these processes
than just make food.
that these chemolithoautotrophs make
that are really, really slow, like rocks,
product other rocks.
or am I talking about geology?
who studies microbes
start studying geology.
of Poás Volcano in Costa Rica.
because an oceanic tectonic plate
this continental plate,
and other materials
are like portals into the deep earth,
the surface and the subsurface world.
by some of my colleagues in Costa Rica
on some of the volcanoes.
because, I mean, Costa Rica is beautiful,
of one of these subduction zones.
the very specific question:
oceanic tectonic plate
throughout the entire subduction zone?
to do with that?
inside Poás Volcano,
Donato Giovannelli.
is made of pure battery acid.
the pH when this picture was taken.
we were working inside the crater,
Carlos Ramírez and I said,
starts erupting right now,
great question, it's totally easy.
he was being overly dramatic,
next to that lake,
this volcano had had in 60-some-odd years,
the video is obliterated
that we had been sampling
this was not going to happen
actually in the volcano,
its volcanoes very carefully
with us on that day.
illustrates perfectly
for where carbon dioxide gas
than the volcanoes themselves.
to these volcanoes
all over the place.
is actually bubbling up
that there should be carbon dioxide
was filtering it out.
driving all around Costa Rica,
measuring and analyzing data.
let you know that the big discoveries
when you're at a beautiful hot spring
over a messy computer
a difficult instrument,
confused about your data.
kind of like deep subsurface microbes,
this really paid off this one time.
tons of carbon dioxide
deeply buried oceanic plate.
them underground
out into the atmosphere
and toucans of Costa Rica,
that were happening around them
into carbonate mineral
are so good at sucking up
coming from below them,
with a little carbon problem
carbon dioxide into our atmosphere
the ability of our planet
and entrepreneurs
to pull carbon dioxide
into the atmosphere.
where this carbon might be stored,
when it goes there.
be a problem because they're too slow
to solid carbonate minerals?
that we did in Costa Rica,
is waiting to be discovered down there.
or deep subsurface biology,
how life and earth have coevolved,
for industrial or medical applications.
the origin of life itself.
to do this by myself.
all over the world
of this deep subsurface world.
buried deep within the earth's crust
that it's kind of irrelevant.
that this weird, slow life
to some of the greatest mysteries
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Karen Lloyd - Marine microbiologistKaren Lloyd studies novel groups of microbes in Earth's deep surface biosphere, collecting them from disparate remote places such as Arctic fjords, volcanoes in Costa Rica, even deep in mud in the Marianas Trench
Why you should listen
Karen G. Lloyd applies molecular biological techniques to environmental samples to learn more about microbes that have thus far evaded attempts to be cultured in a laboratory. She has adapted novel techniques to quantify and characterize these mysterious microbes while requiring minimal changes to their natural conditions. Her work centers on deep oceanic subsurface sediments, deep-sea mud volcanoes and cold seeps, terrestrial volcanoes and hot springs, serpentinizing springs, Arctic marine fjord sediments and ancient permafrost. She is currently an Assistant Professor at the University of Tennessee.
Karen Lloyd | Speaker | TED.com