A map of ocean temperature variation and some of the Sorcerer II sample sites.

This just in, from Technology Review: The ocean hosts a stunningly–and surprisingly–diverse menagerie of microorganisms, according to a massive genetic study published today.

Craig Venter set sail around the world to shotgun sequence the millions of viruses and bacteria in every spoonful of sea water. From the first five ocean samples, this team grew the number of known genes on the planet by 10x and the number of genes involved in solar energy conversion by 100x. The ocean microorganisms have evolved over a longer period of time and have pathways that are more efficient than photosynthesis.

Another discovery: every 200 miles across the open ocean, the microbial genes are up to 85% different. The oceans are not homogenous masses. They consist of myriad uncharted regions of ecological diversity.

Those insights came from the first five samples. On March 13, a second set of data was released. More tidbits from Tech Review:

“We have not understood much about our own planet and our own environment,” Venter told Technology Review from his boat, the Sorcerer II, currently in the Sea of Cortez, in Mexico. “We’ve been missing as much as 99 percent of the life forms and biology out there.”

The first set of results, published this week in three papers in the journal PLoS Biology, revealed six million new proteins, doubling the number of known protein sequences. “Everywhere we sampled, we found new proteins,” says Venter.

In fact, every environment sampled showed high genetic diversity, both within and between samples. The findings are challenging the notion of species in microorganisms. “When you look at microbes, they don’t appear to be individual species”

“Microbial communities are almost like a superorganism, where each microbe is contributing to community as a whole,” says Weinstock. “We really need to characterize the metagenome and analyze the genes and protein products as an aggregate.”

Venter and others eventually hope to find proteins that can be co-opted to create novel bacterial machines–proteins involved in hydrogen production or carbon fixation, for example, that could one day be engineered to boost the carbon-fixing capacity of the ocean or to create fuel-producing bacteria. “Genes are the design component of the future,” says Venter.

For the curious, PLoS has a special collection of open-access articles, including an interactive graphic display of the data and a slide-show video by Venter out in the Sea of Cortez.

11 responses to “Diversity in the Ecological Soup”

  1. great stuff, thanks for the information! Been working on a ‘Peak Oil’ plan for Ventura, CA and trying to convince the planners of the importance of the ocean! This is a timely post for my work right now, which will be of great help, thank you!

  2. wonderful and fascinating, thanks. will check those links properly later.

  3. This collection of papers will, I believe, greatly serve the scientific and engineering communities alike. This is just the beginning in terms of formulating of a whole new way of understanding how Earth systems function from an evolutionary systems perspective. Beyond that, it allows us to think very differently about the complex relationships between organisms and the fluid layer including both ocean and atmosphere; not only how gene expression can be a function of climate, but also how gene expression can, in part, shape climate….a cornerstone for synthetic biology, with potential applications in energy generation and carbon cycle management. As one of the co-authors, I am most excited by the fact that this collection was published in an open-access forum (PLoS – Biology).

    (Steve – I posted this on another of your photo locations also…)

  4. this is amazing stuff, professor.

  5. Very true, microbes interact in very complex communities, with species specializing in different tasks for the community. This research has a lot to do with the work I am doing on microbial communication within biofilms.

  6. This is SO informative, Steve. It would be a really interesting entry for the 2008 – "FIRST – THE EARTH!" Photo-ART Competition Exhibition, and we’d love to have it added to the Group, in CAT. # 3 – ‘SUSTAINABLE DRIVE’. Entry details – http://www.flickr.com/people/melcir-selfportraits-2006/ . – Mel [Group Admin]

  7. Reminds me of the art of one of my favorite flickr artists:

  8. A1-App-FTE-455531011_7dfad6f375_m

    A great image, much admired by Donna62 –,
    a "FIRST – THE EARTH!" member – http://www.flickr.com/groups/first-the-earth/

Leave a Reply to Orange_Wedge Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *