Earth's 'boring billion' years blamed on sulfur-loving microbes
A new study suggests these organisms could have kept oxygen levels low and waters toxic, stalling the evolution of complex life
Web edition : Tuesday, September 29th, 2009
font_down font_up Text Size
access
SULFUR-MUNCHING MICROBEBacteria that thrive on sulfur (above) may have sustained the period in Earth’s history known as the 'boring billion.' David Patterson, Linda Amaral Zettler, Virginia Edgcomb

Sulfur-loving microbes may have been the party poopers of middle Earth. New research suggests that if such microbes dominated the oceans until half a billion years ago, the organisms could have contributed to the static period known as the “boring billion,” scientists report online September 28 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Various feedback loops involving biota and the nutrients they cycle could have maintained this stasis, creating an environment low in oxygen and unfriendly to multicellular life. 

“If we really want to understand what’s happed in the history of Earth, we really have to understand this cross talk between the physical and biological processes,” says study coauthor Andrew Knoll of Harvard University. 

Scientists have long wondered how the Earth remained in the geochemical and evolutionary stagnation that began about 1.8 billion years ago. The “Great Oxidation Event” had already happened, so atmospheric oxygen was up, at least a little. Eukaryotes — with DNA sequestered in a membrane — had already evolved. But then everything got put on hold for about a billion years: Oxygen levels remained flat, and life remained simple. 

“We don’t have a full understanding of what the full biogeochemical system might have been doing at this time,” comments Mark Claire of the University of Washington in Seattle. “Something was throttling the oxygen levels.”

That something may have been sulfur-oxidizing microbes, which don’t release oxygen into the atmosphere. Knoll, David Johnston and their Harvard colleagues propose. Previous work suggests that the oceans in this era, known as the Proterozoic, were rich in sulfur. So the researchers argue that an abundance of microbes that can use different forms of sulfur affected biogeochemical cycling. These sulfur-using microbes may have set in motion feedback loops that locked Earth in this stasis, the researcher propose. 

Though typical photosynthesizers were still generating oxygen from water in the uppermost layer of the oceans, a toxic layer was forming beneath. There, green and purple bacteria and other microbes used sulfur, washed into oceans by the weathering of the continents, to photosynthesize. Since it is easier to pry electrons from sulfur than from water, sulfur-cycling microbes had an edge, Knoll says. But sulfur-based photosynthesis does not release oxygen, and sulfur recycled and remained in the system.

As the sulfur-based organisms died, their decomposition further robbed the water of oxygen. These processes may have led to a thick dead zone, similar to that seen in today’s Gulf of Mexico. 

Eventually, something shifted — perhaps iron from continental activity entered the oceans, the researcher speculate. Iron binds to forms of sulfur, pulling it out of the system as pyrite. This may have been a blow to sulfur users, allowing photosynthesis by oxygen-generators to increase. And pretty soon, by 600 million years ago, multicellular life arrives at the party. 

“This releases the stranglehold of the system,” Knoll says. “The minute you get rid of sulfide you change how the world works.” 

The model reminds physical scientists to pay attention to the contribution of biota to Earth’s geochemical cycling, Knoll notes. The team now plans to investigate the timing of eukaryotic fossils and the demise of the sulfurous seas as tests for the hypothesis. The project, Knoll says, “gave me new glasses for looking at Earth’s history.”


Found in: Chemistry, Earth and Life
Comments 5
  • I don't know if it only works under intense pressure and heat, but the oceanic vents show that multicellular life can thrive within a sulfur-based ecosystem.
    Warren Biggs Warren Biggs
    Sep. 29, 2009 at 11:34pm
  • This would seem a practical hypothosis, at least for the idea of how this post-boring billion reduction in Sulfur loving life forms; but I was still reminded of the fact that the entire Earth may have become covered with a thick matt of purple and green sulfur loving fungi and bacteria, after several of the known great extinction events.
    I've speculated, broadly, and e-mailed some 'non-lay' researchers about the possibility that, at least once, the Earths Oxygen producing flora might have put so much Oxygen into the atmosphere, that it flashed off in a great fire.
    This would have led to massive amounts of ANaerobic Decay - which produces copious quantities of Hydrogen Sulfide, as well as both of the Sulfur Oxides.
    That sounds like a "Purple and Green Sulfiur-Loving Fungi & Bacteria Wonderland" to me!
    And...Why Not? Who says the Earth didn't, say, have to EVOLVE some kind of 'regulatory mechanism', before Oxygen became more than just the Dangerous Explosive & Deadly Poisonous Waste Product that it once was.
    Oxygen, in a very real way, was at the Heart of the Earths very first Biogenic Global Toxic Waste Reprocessing Problem.
    James Staples James Staples
    Oct. 4, 2009 at 5:45pm
  • Dear Warren Biggs
    A second comment, for you.
    Check out the 'Methane Hydrite Ice Worms', here:
    http://blog.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/42853/title/Antarctic_ecosystem_holds__unusual_microbes
    They harbor the same two sulfur and methane (respectively) loving archaea that are found in the ocean muck globally down to several kilometers; and the bacteria turn the sulfur and methane in the hydrite ice into carbohydrates that the worms then feed on in a truly, truly weird kind of symbiosis
    One could almost see these things living, mostly in frozen suspended animation, in the icy masses of comets; coming to life just long enough to feed and breed, as the comet swoops through the inner system and warm up enough.
    James Staples James Staples
    Oct. 4, 2009 at 5:57pm
  • Warren, the vent animals use oxygen in the water, thus they need aerobic photosynthesis at least indirectly.
    Adam Crowl Adam Crowl
    Oct. 7, 2009 at 5:37am
  • Ah Well! maybe Jupiter moon Io might be a better spot for sulfer bacteria to evolve. not as much Iron there to derail their evolution.
    john zilka john zilka
    Oct. 10, 2009 at 12:31am
Post a comment

Please login or register to participate.


Advertisement
Suggested Reading:
seperator
  • S. Perkins. 2009. The Iron Record of Earth’s Oxygen. Science News 135 (June 20): 24
    [Go to]
Citations & References:
seperator
  • D. T. Johnston et al. 2009. Anoxygenic photosynthesis modulated Proterozoic oxygen and sustained Earth’s middle age. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, in press.
    doi: 10.1073.pnas.0909248106
Reader Favorites:
seperator
SN on the Web:
seperator