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Wiley InterScience

Environmental Microbiology

Environmental Microbiology

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Volume 9 Issue 12, Pages 2911 - 2922

Published Online: 23 Oct 2007

© 2010 Society for Applied Microbiology and Blackwell Publishing Ltd



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Life in Darwin's dust: intercontinental transport and survival of microbes in the nineteenth century
Anna A. Gorbushina, 1 Renate Kort, 1 Anette Schulte, 1 David Lazarus, 2 Bernhard Schnetger, 3 Hans-Jürgen Brumsack, 3 William J. Broughton 4 * and Jocelyne Favet 4
  1 Geomicrobiology, ICBM, Carl von Ossietzky Universität, Oldenburg, Carl-von-Ossietzky Str. 9-11, 26111 Oldenburg, Germany.
  2 Museum für Naturkunde, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Invalidenstrasse 43, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
  3 Microbiogeochemistry, ICBM, Carl von Ossietzky Universität, Oldenburg, Carl-von-Ossietzky str. 9-11, 26111 Oldenburg, Germany.
  4 LBMPS, Université de Genève, 30 quai Ernest-Ansermet, 1211 Genève 4, Switzerland.
Correspondence to   *E-mail william.broughton@bioveg.unige.ch; Tel. (+41) 22 3793 108/9; Fax (+41) 22 3793 009.
Copyright © 2007 The Authors; Journal compilation © 2007 Society for Applied Microbiology and Blackwell Publishing Ltd

ABSTRACT

Charles Darwin, like others before him, collected aeolian dust over the Atlantic Ocean and sent it to Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg in Berlin. Ehrenberg's collection is now housed in the Museum of Natural History and contains specimens that were gathered at the onset of the Industrial Revolution. Geochemical analyses of this resource indicated that dust collected over the Atlantic in 1838 originated from the Western Sahara, while molecular-microbiological methods demonstrated the presence of many viable microbes. Older samples sent to Ehrenberg from Barbados almost two centuries ago also contained numbers of cultivable bacteria and fungi. Many diverse ascomycetes, and eubacteria were found. Scanning electron microscopy and cultivation suggested that Bacillus megaterium, a common soil bacterium, was attached to historic sand grains, and it was inoculated onto dry sand along with a non-spore-forming control, the Gram-negative soil bacterium Rhizobium sp. NGR234. On sand B. megaterium quickly developed spores, which survived for extended periods and even though the numbers of NGR234 steadily declined, they were still considerable after months of incubation. Thus, microbes that adhere to Saharan dust can live for centuries and easily survive transport across the Atlantic.


Received 13 July, 2007; accepted 6 September, 2007.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1462-2920.2007.01461.x About DOI

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