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    Bacterial growth at the high concentrations of magnesium sulfate found in martian soils

    Date
    2012-02
    Author
    Crisler, James D.
    Newville, T.M.
    Chen, Fei
    Clark, Benton C.
    Schneegurt, Mark A.
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Crisler J.D., Newville T.M., Schneegurt M.A., Chen F., and Clark B.C. 2012. "Bacterial growth at the high concentrations of magnesium sulfate found in martian soils". Astrobiology. 12 (2): 98-106.
    Abstract
    The martian surface environment exhibits extremes of salinity, temperature, desiccation, and radiation that would make it difficult for terrestrial microbes to survive. Recent evidence suggests that martian soils contain high concentrations of MgSO₄ minerals. Through warming of the soils, meltwater derived from subterranean ice-rich regolith may exist for an extended period of time and thus allow the propagation of terrestrial microbes and create significant bioburden at the near surface of Mars. The current report demonstrates that halotolerant bacteria from the Great Salt Plains (GSP) of Oklahoma are capable of growing at high concentrations of MgSO₄ in the form of 2 M solutions of epsomite. The epsotolerance of isolates in the GSP bacterial collection was determined, with 35% growing at 2 M MgSO₄. There was a complex physiological response to mixtures of MgSO₄ and NaCl coupled with other environmental stressors. Growth also was measured at 1 M concentrations of other magnesium and sulfate salts. The complex responses may be partially explained by the pattern of chaotropicity observed for high-salt solutions as measured by agar gelation temperature. Select isolates could grow at the high salt concentrations and low temperatures found on Mars. Survival during repetitive freeze-thaw or drying-rewetting cycles was used as other measures of potential success on the martian surface. Our results indicate that terrestrial microbes might survive under the high-salt, low-temperature, anaerobic conditions on Mars and present significant potential for forward contamination. Stringent planetary protection requirements are needed for future life-detection missions to Mars.
    Description
    Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10057/4914
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ast.2011.0720
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