麻豆传媒

Human pathogens threaten ancient cave art

Prehistoric paintings at Lascaux are now home to a cocktail of damaging bacteria following the ousting of a nasty fungal infestation

The prehistoric cave paintings at Lascaux are under attack from a cocktail of damaging bacteria
The prehistoric cave paintings at Lascaux are under attack from a cocktail of damaging bacteria
(Image: LABAT Jean Michel / Sunset / Rex Features)
According to the researchers' analysis, Lascaux's management history is a catalogue of errors
According to the researchers鈥 analysis, Lascaux鈥檚 management history is a catalogue of errors
(Image: LABAT Jean Michel / Sunset / Rex Features)
The team think the bacteria started to arrive in 1940, when the caves were discovered and opened to the public
The team think the bacteria started to arrive in 1940, when the caves were discovered and opened to the public
(Image: LABAT Jean Michel / Sunset / Rex Features)
Over 1800 people visited each day, and their breath would have permanently altered the atmosphere and microbiology of the site
Over 1800 people visited each day, and their breath would have permanently altered the atmosphere and microbiology of the site
(Image: LABAT Jean Michel / Sunset / Rex Features)
New air conditioning systems and lighting only added to the problem, and the caves were closed to the public in 1963
New air conditioning systems and lighting only added to the problem, and the caves were closed to the public in 1963
(Image: LABAT Jean Michel / Sunset / Rex Features)
The arrival of the fungus in 2001, and the subsequent antifungal spraying, accelerated the destruction of an environment that had kept the paintings largely unharmed for 16,000 years
The arrival of the fungus in 2001, and the subsequent antifungal spraying, accelerated the destruction of an environment that had kept the paintings largely unharmed for 16,000 years
(Image: <a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Prof_saxx">Prof saxx</a>, Wikimedia Commons)

HISTORIC cave paintings in France partially saved from attack by a black fungus face a new threat: bacteria that moved in following four years of spraying with fungicide.

The in south-west France houses that are between 16,000 and 17,000 years old, making them among the oldest examples of cave art ever found. Now conservationists must deal with the twin threats of the Fusarium solani fungus and the new bacterial populations.

The latest invasion came to light when a team of Spanish and French microbiologists analysed 11 swabs from the cave walls, comparing the profile of species found in Lascaux with those in undisturbed caves in Spain. Almost all the bacteria and protozoa found in Lascaux were associated with human activity.

鈥淭he Lascaux cave is now a reservoir of potential pathogenic bacteria and protozoa similar to those found in disease outbreaks linked to contaminated air-conditioning systems and cooling towers in hospitals and public buildings,鈥 says team member Cesareo Saiz-Jimenez of the Spanish Institute of Natural and Agrobiological Research in Seville.

The team conclude that a benzalkonium chloride spray applied between 2001 and 2004 to kill the fungus is to blame, as it allowed bacteria brought in by human visitors to thrive (, ). 鈥淚t produced a drastic change in the cave biodiversity,鈥 says Saiz-Jimenez.

According to the researchers鈥 analysis, Lascaux鈥檚 management history is a catalogue of errors. The team think the bacteria started to arrive in 1940, when the caves were discovered and opened to the public. Over 1800 people visited each day, and their breath would have permanently altered the atmosphere and microbiology of the site. New air conditioning systems and lighting only added to the problem, and the caves were closed to the public in 1963. Arrival of the fungus in 2001 and subsequent antifungal spraying accelerated the destruction of the environment that had kept the paintings largely unharmed for 16,000 years.

There is hope for the paintings, however. Saiz-Jimenez and his colleagues have been testing conservation techniques in Spanish caves that avoid fungicides, relying instead on meticulous control of the cave microclimate. They are also examining whether hydrogen peroxide can destroy the organic matter that the fungi and bacteria feed on.

Topics: Evolution