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Wednesday August 31, 2022

PhysOrg

A team of researchers affiliated with multiple institutions in Canada, working with a colleague from the U.S., has found evidence of long-lived sub-seafloor bacteria seeping up into the ocean and traveling long distances via currents. In their paper published in the journal Science Advances, the group describes their genetic study of bacteria samples collected from the seafloor.

Prior research has suggested that huge amounts of bacteria live under the world’s oceans, some up to thousands of meters deep. Those at such depths enter a suspended state, waiting for favorable conditions to arise. When that happens, the bacteria awaken and resume their activities.

Prior research has also shown that some of the bacteria that live under the sea consume oil that seeps from the floor up into the sea. Research has also suggested that some oil-loving bacteria seep into the ocean along with the oil. In this new effort, the researchers learned more about such bacteria by first finding oil seeps and then by capturing and studying the bacteria they contain.

The researchers found oil seeps by conducting acoustic surveys on a part of the continental shelf off the southwest coast of Novia Scotia. They sent down an autonomous submarine to investigate the seeps. Next, they lowered tubes from a ship to the oil seeps and sucked up mud samples from 14 sites across a wide swath of ocean floor.

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