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Could rising temperatures release ancient pathogens preserved in ice ?

July 30, 2023 · Comment icon 27 comments

What is being released by the melting ice ? Image Credit: Pixabay / Wild0ne
Researchers outline the potential dangers posed by ancient pathogens being unleashed on an unsuspecting world.
Science fiction is rife with fanciful tales of deadly organisms emerging from the ice and wreaking havoc on unsuspecting human victims.

From shape-shifting aliens in Antarctica, to super-parasites emerging from a thawing woolly mammoth in Siberia, to exposed permafrost in Greenland causing a viral pandemic - the concept is marvellous plot fodder.

But just how far-fetched is it? Could pathogens that were once common on Earth - but frozen for millennia in glaciers, ice caps and permafrost - emerge from the melting ice to lay waste to modern ecosystems? The potential is, in fact, quite real.

Dangers lying in wait

In 2003, bacteria were revived from samples taken from the bottom of an ice core drilled into an ice cap on the Qinghai-Tibetan plateau. The ice at that depth was more than 750,000 years old.

In 2014, a giant "zombie" Pithovirus sibericum virus was revived from 30,000-year-old Siberian permafrost.

And in 2016, an outbreak of anthrax (a disease caused by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis) in western Siberia was attributed to the rapid thawing of B. anthracis spores in permafrost. It killed thousands of reindeer and affected dozens of people.

More recently, scientists found remarkable genetic compatibility between viruses isolated from lake sediments in the high Arctic and potential living hosts.

Earth's climate is warming at a spectacular rate, and up to four times faster in colder regions such as the Arctic. Estimates suggest we can expect four sextillion (4,000,000,000,000,000,000,000) microorganisms to be released from ice melt each year. This is about the same as the estimated number of stars in the universe.

However, despite the unfathomably large number of microorganisms being released from melting ice (including pathogens that can potentially infect modern species), no one has been able to estimate the risk this poses to modern ecosystems.

In a new study published today in the journal PLOS Computational Biology, we calculated the ecological risks posed by the release of unpredictable ancient viruses.

Our simulations show that 1% of simulated releases of just one dormant pathogen could cause major environmental damage and the widespread loss of host organisms around the world.

Digital worlds
We used a software called Avida to run experiments that simulated the release of one type of ancient pathogen into modern biological communities.

We then measured the impacts of this invading pathogen on the diversity of modern host bacteria in thousands of simulations, and compared these to simulations where no invasion occurred.

The invading pathogens often survived and evolved in the simulated modern world. About 3% of the time the pathogen became dominant in the new environment, in which case they were very likely to cause losses to modern host diversity.

In the worst- (but still entirely plausible) case scenario, the invasion reduced the size of its host community by 30% when compared to controls.

The risk from this small fraction of pathogens might seem small, but keep in mind these are the results of releasing just one particular pathogen in simulated environments. With the sheer number of ancient microbes being released in the real world, such outbreaks represent a substantial danger.

Extinction and disease

Our findings suggest this unpredictable threat which has so far been confined to science fiction could become a powerful driver of ecological change.

While we didn't model the potential risk to humans, the fact that "time-travelling" pathogens could become established and severely degrade a host community is already worrisome.

We highlight yet another source of potential species extinction in the modern era - one which even our worst-case extinction models do not include. As a society, we need to understand the potential risks so we can prepare for them.

Notable viruses such as SARS-CoV-2, Ebola and HIV were likely transmitted to humans via contact with other animal hosts. So it is plausible that a once ice-bound virus could enter the human population via a zoonotic pathway.

While the likelihood of a pathogen emerging from melting ice and causing catastrophic extinctions is low, our results show this is no longer a fantasy for which we shouldn't prepare.

Corey J. A. Bradshaw, Matthew Flinders Professor of Global Ecology and Models Theme Leader for the ARC Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage, Flinders University and Giovanni Strona, Doctoral program supervisor, University of Helsinki

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

Read the original article. The Conversation

Source: The Conversation | Comments (27)




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Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #18 Posted by Doug1066 1 year ago
It is time to listen to what Trump is saying.  He is threatening violence against anybody who opposes him.  The law provides that when a person is a danger to the community he can be denied bail and locked up pending trial.  It is time to implement that law. Jails and prisons do not have to let an inmate talk to anybody except their lawyer.  Locking him up would be the end of his 2024 campaign. Doug
Comment icon #19 Posted by Cho Jinn 1 year ago
He’s - literally - Orange Tyrannosaurus Rex Hitler.
Comment icon #20 Posted by Cho Jinn 1 year ago
LOL, keep it coming!
Comment icon #21 Posted by Portre 1 year ago
Seriously? You expect sense from FOG? 
Comment icon #22 Posted by Doug1066 1 year ago
Consider the timing:  when Warp Speed was first implemented there was no covid vaccine.  Vaccination was not an issue. Only when the vaccines started coming on line and the MAGAs started believing false stories about them, did Trump realize that he could make some political brownie points with his followers by bad-mouthing the vaccines.  So he did. What he forgot was that there were many more people afraid of covid and not afraid of the shots than there were MAGAs.  He could have built up sufficient support from the center to win re-election.  All he had to do was follow the recommendatio... [More]
Comment icon #23 Posted by Doug1066 1 year ago
Did you inject bleach, or take a horse-sized dose of ivermectin? Doug
Comment icon #24 Posted by George Ford 1 year ago
Well ok, but what about the increase in sexually transmitted diseases? I few years ago there was a news article on how diseases like HIV, drug resistant gonorrhea and syphilis were massively on the increase with dating (sex hook up) sites being to blame. There was something like a 900% increase in gonorrhea in my city alone. Yet you never here anyone talking about.
Comment icon #25 Posted by Nicolette 1 year ago
No but i did catch a cold. Had to decline the doctor's advice that the only solution was to go out for ice cream though, as it would be irresponsible and just plain rude spreading it throughout the ice cream shop.
Comment icon #26 Posted by and-then 1 year ago
I wore a mask for as long as it was demanded.  I'll never do it again under compulsion, but I'll cheerfully don one in public if I'm hacking and coughing or presenting with other symptoms of a cold or flu.  
Comment icon #27 Posted by Hammerclaw 1 year ago
A dose of clap is painful but curable and even the most vociferous antivaxers and needle-phobes will line up for the shots.


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