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posted by LaminatorX on Saturday November 22 2014, @11:38PM   Printer-friendly
from the ATTEMPT-NO-LANDING-THERE dept.

Scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory are studying a mysterious ecosystem at one of the world's deepest undersea hydrothermal vents to get clues about what life could be like on other planetary bodies, such as Jupiter's icy moon Europa, which has a subsurface ocean. At the vents tiny shrimp are piled on top of each other, layer upon layer, crawling on rock chimneys that spew hot water. "You go along the ocean bottom and there's nothing, effectively," says Max Coleman. "And then suddenly we get these hydrothermal vents and a massive ecosystem. It's just literally teeming with life." Bacteria, inside the shrimps' mouths and in specially evolved gill covers, produce organic matter that feed the crustaceans. The particular bacteria in the vents are able to survive in extreme environments because of chemosynthesis, a process that works in the absence of sunlight and involves organisms getting energy from chemical reactions. In this case, the bacteria use hydrogen sulfide, a chemical abundant at the vents, to make organic matter. The temperatures at the vents can climb up to a scorching 842 degrees Fahrenheit (450 degrees Celsius), but waters just an inch away are cool enough to support the shrimp. The shrimp are blind, but have thermal receptors in the backs of their heads.

According to the exobiologists, these mysterious shrimps and its symbiotic bacterium may hold clues "about what life could be like on other planetary bodies." It's life that may be similar—at the basic level—to what could be lurking in the oceans of Europa, deep under the icy crust of the Jupiter moon. According to Emma Versteegh "whether an animal like this could exist on Europa heavily depends on the actual amount of energy that's released there, through hydrothermal vents." Nobody is seriously planning a landing mission on Europa yet. But the European Space Agency aims to launch its JUpiter ICy moons Explorer mission (JUICE) to make the first thickness measurements of Europa's icy crust starting in 2030 and NASA also has begun planning a Europa Clipper mission that would study the icy moon while doing flybys in a Jupiter orbit.

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  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 22 2014, @11:48PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 22 2014, @11:48PM (#118968)

    Perhaps bacteria are better candidates for extreme environments, but not shrimp. Shrimp didn't evolve out of single cell organisms near these vents. They adapted to live by these vents later on. Single cell organisms, on the other hand, probably have a better chance of starting near these vents in the first place ...

    • (Score: 2, Funny) by art guerrilla on Sunday November 23 2014, @12:59PM

      by art guerrilla (3082) on Sunday November 23 2014, @12:59PM (#119085)

      you had me at 'shrimp'...

      (which my mind/stomach automatically completes with,"i'll get the garlic butter")