homehome Home chatchat Notifications


A trillion species on Earth? 99.999% species of microbes remain undiscovered, scientists say

Microbes make up the vast majority of Earth's species but we're still clueless when it comes to identifying them

Mihai Andrei
May 3, 2016 @ 8:46 pm

share Share

Microbes make up the vast majority of Earth’s species but we’re still clueless when it comes to identifying them, scientists say.

For every microbe species we know of, there’s another 99,999 species we know nothing about – that’s a thought. Two biologists from Indiana University conducted a study cataloguing microbe species, and the rate at which these species were discovered.

“We’ve done a pretty good job of cataloguing macrobes. Maybe every few years you’ll hear about a new worm at the bottom of the ocean, but the rate we are exploring new [plants and animals] is slowing down,” Jay Lennon, a microbial biology researcher at Indiana University Bloomington (IU) and co-author of the new study, tells The Christian Science Monitor in a phone interview Sunday.

“But it’s only in the last 20 to 30 years that people have figured out how to identify microbes; we are still in an area of discovery. Before this study, it was hard to know where we were. These are the most abundant life on Earth, so from a scientific perspective, we’ve missed a huge group,” he says.

The sheer size of this estimate is dazzling. The diversity of the microbial species that surround us and of which we know nothing about is mind blowing. Postdoctoral fellow Kenneth Locey, who applied mathematical scaling laws to predict the number of species in an individual landscape said:

“Until now, we haven’t known whether aspects of biodiversity scale with something as simple as the abundance of organisms,” Dr. Locey says in the university’s press release. “As it turns out, the relationships are not only simple but powerful, resulting in the estimate of upwards of 1 trillion species.”

Using a throng of data sets, ecological models and statistical analysis, they estimated a total of 1 trillion species. Their models incorporated several different sources of information, including data compiled by governments, academic institutions and citizen scientists.

Journal Reference: Scaling laws predict global microbial diversity. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1521291113http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2016/04/26/1521291113

share Share

The Sound of the Big Bang Might Be Telling Us Our Galaxy Lives in a Billion-Light-Year-Wide Cosmic Hole

Controversial model posits Earth and our galaxy may reside in a supervoid.

What did ancient Rome smell like? Fish, Raw Sewage, and Sometimes Perfume

Turns out, Ancient Rome was pretty rancid.

These bizarre stars could be burning darkness to survive

Our quest for dark matter is sending us on some wild adventures.

The new fashion trend among chimpanzees: sticking grass in your ear (and butt)

A new trend is making the rounds in a chimp community.

Scientists Created an Evolution Engine That Works Inside Animal Cells Like a Biological AI

This system accelerates evolution in living cells and it's open source.

A Common Cough Syrup Might Protect the Brain in Parkinson’s Dementia

An old drug reveals new potential — but only in some patients.

A Common DNA Sugar Just Matched Minoxidil in Hair Regrowth Tests on Mice

Is the future of hair regrowth hidden in 2-deoxy-D-ribose?

This Abandoned Island Off Venice Was a Plague Hospital, a Mental Asylum, and a Mass Grave

It's one of the creepiest places you can imagine.

Doctors Restored Hearing in Children and Adults With a Single Shot

A one-time injection helped some patients hear for the first time in their lives

Being Left-Handed Might Not Make You More Creative After All

It's less about how you use your hands than how you use your brain.