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Venus’s hair; Thiolava veneris

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Epifluorescence micrograph of a single Thiolava veneris filament picked from the solid lava substrate. Image credit: Roberto Danovaro

In 2011, the underwater volcano Tagoro erupted in Canary Islands. The eruption increased water temperature, decreased oxygen and released massive quantities of carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide. It literally wiped out much of the ecosystem off the coast.

Three years later, a strange new bacteria was the first organism to re-colonize the area. Three years later, a strange new bacteria was found to re-colonize the area. It was a new species of proteobacteria producing long, hair-like structures composed of bacterial cells within a sheath. Due to its long, hair-like structures, sceintists called it ‘Venus’s hair’.


Bacteria grown as a white mat. Image credit: Miquel Canals/University of Barcelona, Spain

The bacteria grew a massive white mat, extending for nearly half an acre around the summit of the newly formed Tagoro volcanic cone at depths of about 430 feet (129-132 m).

Suggested Reading​

1.
Danovaro R, Canals M, Tangherlini M, et al. A submarine volcanic eruption leads to a novel microbial habitat. N. 2017;1(6):0144. doi:10.1038/s41559-017-0144

The post Venus’s hair; Thiolava veneris appeared first on Amazing Zoology.
 
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