Karen Lloyd: This deep-sea mystery is changing our understanding of life
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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at the University of Tennessee,
about some microbes
about what life is like on Earth.
if you've ever thought it would be cool
of the ocean in a submarine?
the oceans are so cool.
to go to the bottom of the ocean
a little bit closer
how deep we can go into the Earth
anything, that's alive,
the answer to this very basic question
named John Parkes, in the UK,
deep, and living microbial biosphere
into the seafloor,
is that nobody believed him,
may be the most boring place on Earth.
for literally millions of years.
to go looking for life.
convinced enough people
that he actually got an expedition
called the JOIDES Resolution.
Bo Barker Jørgensen of Denmark.
from surface microbes.
thousands of meters underneath the ocean,
one after the other --
such as myself who go on these ships,
and then we send them home
for further study.
deep-sea pristine samples,
that looked pretty much like this,
from a more recent expedition
in the background.
stained with the green fluorescent dye
something really tragic about microbes.
organisms in the world,
breathes uranium,
to tell them apart.
how to do it right now.
to show you some data that are not real.
what it would look like
were not related to each other at all.
of A, G, C and T,
and nothing looks like anything else,
are totally unrelated to each other.
happen to share.
so many of those vertical columns
or every species has a T,
had to have had a common ancestor.
because, I mean, obviously.
that we don't look like,
which is that gastrointestinal disease
your water while you're hiking.
like E. coli and Clostridium difficile,
pathogen that kills lots of people.
like Dehalococcoides ethenogenes,
our industrial waste for us.
and differences between them,
and bunnies and pine trees
are like our ancient cousins.
living thing on Earth.
against existential loneliness.
from the deep subsurface,
is that they were not aliens,
with everything else on Earth.
on our tree of life.
is that there's a lot of them.
in this horrible place.
like anything we've ever seen before.
that we've known before
a completely new and highly diverse
before the 1980s.
these exotic species in a petri dish
do real experiments on them
and many expeditions later,
of these exotic deep subsurface microbes
tantalizing unknowns to work on.
what we thought was a really great idea.
like a recipe book,
and put it in their petri dishes,
was the food we were already feeding them.
that they wanted in their petri dishes
from many different places
of Southern California,
of these deep-sea microbial cells
a zepto is 10 to the minus 21,
to look that up.
if you take a pineapple
to the ground 881,632 times a day.
and then linked it up to a turbine,
to make me happen for a day.
in similar terms,
a tiny, tiny, little ball
of that one grain of salt
than the wavelength of visible light,
to make these microbes live.
would be capable of supporting life,
with energy than we previously thought,
with time as well,
on such tiny energy gradients,
to colonize our throats and make us sick,
by fast-growing streptococcus
initiate cell division.
find them in our throats.
subsurface is so boring
in our petri dishes
that I'll never be able to give them.
that I pass to my PhD students,
PhD students, and so on,
for thousands of years
of the deep subsurface,
grown them in our petri dishes.
we offered them and said,
a new cell next century.
of biology moves so fast?
after only a hundred years?
arbitrarily short limits
of time in the universe.
the energy of the Sun
and get on day and night cycles.
both a reason to be fast
like a circulatory system,
is like a circulatory system
disconnected from the Sun.
by long, slow geological rhythms.
on the lifespan of one single cell.
a tiny energy gradient to exploit,
of years or more,
broken parts over time.
to grow in our petri dishes
Sun-centric, fast way of living,
better things to do than that.
how they managed to do this.
ultra-stable compounds
to increase the shelf life
the mechanism that they use
and slow runaway cell division.
a hundred billion billion billlion
biomass of humans on this planet.
a fundamentally different relationship
about my petri dishes ...
creative ways to study them,
what life, all of life, is like on Earth.
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