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Comment and Earth

Let's protect Earth's unseen life

Microbes are being failed by existing conservation efforts. We need a global strategy to ensure their survival

By Gareth Griffith

29 February 2012

Âé¶¹´«Ã½. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

(Image: Andrzej Krauze)

“IF THE last blue whale choked to death on the last panda, it would be disastrous but not the end of the world. But if we accidentally poisoned the last two species of ammonia oxidisers, that would be another matter. It could be happening now and we wouldn’t even know.”

The sum up the seeming disregard for microbial life beautifully. The tree of life is diverse. Many kingdoms make up its three domains, but only two of those kingdoms within the domain Eukaryota, the Plantae and Animalia, appear to merit conservation biologists’ attention.

The neglected kingdoms are broadly microbial and comprise by any measure, be it their biomass or genetic diversity, the of life. Are only “macrobes” at risk of extinction or are only those organisms visible to the naked eye worthy of conservation?

“Are only ‘macrobes’ at risk of extinction or organisms visible to the naked eye worthy of conservation?”

No. Microbes may appear endlessly abundant, everywhere and to an extent interchangeable, but some do face real threats to their existence. The problem is that microbes, for reasons including a lack of descriptive data, are not easily accommodated within the (CBD), which seeks to preserve diversity. That’s why I propose a formal Global Strategy for Microbial Conservation.

You only have to look at mainstream conservation journals to see the macrobial bias: only 2 per cent of papers relate to microbes, and even then mostly as threats to larger organisms rather than being concerned with their preservation.

Whereas the chiefly single-celled prokaryotes barely figure in the CBD, fungi at least get a mention in the updated , which is part of the convention: “Parties may choose on a national basis to include other taxa, including algae, lichens and fungi.” However, the implication of subordinate status is clear.

Yet fungi are the dominant decomposers of plant-derived lignocellulose, the major structural component of all plants, releasing nutrients from dead material to the soil, vital for agriculture. Given that fungi supply core ecological functions that are beneficial to humankind, it is perplexing that they are afforded such meagre attention and protection.

There is a much overused phrase in microbiology – – which suggests that microbial populations are not localised but geographically ubiquitous, and unlikely to be at risk. Some, such as , do appear to be ubiquitous, but . This is also the case for many pathogens of humans, animals or crops, which have, or had until humans transported them, well-defined distributions. So habitat change in a limited area may threaten them.

The symbiotic microbes present on and inside all larger organisms are notable among those that need specific habitats. A that is apparently specific to the hindgut of the critically endangered Somali wild ass, for example, is at risk of extinction through habitat loss before it is even formally described. This could also work in reverse – the loss of some symbiotic microbes could increase the extinction risk of their hosts given their mutual interdependence, as has been suggested for some . In addition, changes in the microbial ecology of the mammalian digestive tract .

Central to our improved understanding of all this is DNA barcoding, which allows the detection of uncultured and unseen microbes. High-throughput sequencing of environmental samples is now cheap. This is revealing many undescribed taxa and extensive cryptic speciation – groups of microbes that look very similar but are distinct species. Importantly it is also providing detailed .

It could be argued that protecting the ecosystem will suffice to protect its microbes. This is clearly sensible when resources are scarce. However, many ecosystems are neglected in conservation strategies simply because of the absence of larger organisms, for instance desert soil crusts, glaciers or unusual geological formations.

One topical example is Lake Vostok, 4 kilometres beneath the Antarctic ice, where a Russian drilling programme recently reported breaching the lake surface. The indigenous biota, currently unknown and possibly unique, is . The potential exploration of other deep sea or subsurface ecosystems will raise other “Schrödinger’s cat” dilemmas.

Despite huge gaps in our knowledge of the distribution and abundance of microbes, a global strategy should focus on the protection of such microbially dominated habitats. It should include, as a matter of priority, endangered soil habitats and soil types, where the are to be found.

Raising the profile of microbial conservation must come from microbiologists, but the support of the broader conservation movement is needed. Studies of threatened microbes need to be published in mainstream conservation journals. The appointment of microbial ecologists to editorial boards would help.

Finally, all conservation efforts are ultimately funded by the public and here education is needed to counteract negative perceptions, such as that all bacteria are “bad” or all fungi are “poisonous”. It should also highlight the beauty and biotechnological usefulness of microbes, as well as their fundamental importance to the wider living world.

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