Posted on 04/07/2020 8:30:02 AM PDT by rightwingcrazy
New research from an international team of scientists is suggesting that instantly recognizable earthy smell after rain is released by bacteria trying to attract a particular arthropod as a way to spread its spores. The smell is a 500-million-year-old example of chemical communication, evolved to help a particular type of bacteria spread.
Scientists have long been fascinated by the unique odor that appears when it rains. The scent is particularly prominent when the first rains of a season hit dry soil. Two Australian researchers named the odor petrichor, after an influential study in the 1960s suggested a particular oil is produced by certain plants during dry periods, and then released into the air when it rains.
One major component of petrichor is an organic compound called geosmin. Scientists have known for some time that a common genus of bacteria, known as Streptomyces, produce geosmin. Virtually all species of Streptomyces release geosmin when they die, but until now it has been unclear exactly why the bacteria generates this distinctive aroma.
The fact that they all make geosmin suggested that it confers a selective advantage on the bacteria, otherwise they wouldnt do it, says an author on the new research, Mark Buttner. So, we suspected they were signaling to something and the most obvious thing would be some animal or insect that might help distribute the Streptomyces spores.
Across a number of lab and field experiments the researchers discovered geosmin specifically attracts a type of tiny arthropod called a springtail. Studying the antennae of the springtails the researchers discovered the organisms can directly sense geosmin. The researchers suggest both organisms evolved together, the Streptomyces serving as food for the springtails, while the springtails subsequently spread bacterial spores helping seed new Streptomyces colonies.
There is mutual benefit, explains Buttner. The springtails eat the Streptomyces, so the geosmin is attracting them to a valuable food source. And, the springtails distribute the spores, both stuck on their bodies and in their faeces, which are full of viable spores, so the Streptomyces get dispersed. This is analogous to birds eating the fruits of plants. They get food but they also distribute the seeds, which benefits the plants.
This symbiotic relationship is key to the survival of Streptomyces, as the bacteria is known to produce certain antibiotic compounds that make it toxic to other organisms such as fruit flies or nematodes. Springtails, on the other hand, generate a number of novel enzymes that can detoxify the antibiotics produced by Streptomyces.
This compelling novel discovery suggests a major element to that iconic wet earth scent is underpinned by a nearly 500-million-year-old relationship between bacteria and arthropods, mediated by an extraordinarily specific mode of chemical communication.
We used to believe Streptomyces spores were distributed by wind and water but there is little room for wind or water to do anything in the small air compartments in the soil, says Buttner. So, these small primitive animals have become important in completing the lifecycle of the Streptomyces, one of the most important sources of antibiotics known to science.
The new study was published in the journal Nature Microbiology.
Source: John Innes Centre
Is that the same stuff that went into the guys Ear Canal in Alien Covenant and infected him?
The same is true of rain. Moisture abounds in the air as invisible humidity (except perhaps Phoenix). Moisture abounding in the air surrounding dust/dirt/pollutants as visible clouds (including Phoenix).
Wow, the tendentious, unsusbstantiated anthropomorphisms behind this author's writing!
Nothing better than the smell of sage after a rainstorm in the desert.
I grew up in southeastern Montana and I love that smell as well.
I saw this a few years ago in a science cartoon I was playing for my son.
I live in the desert where it rarely rains and the day after a rain EVERYTHING emerges and the land is full of insects and frogs and toads. Cacti bloom overnight and things you thought were dead come to life.
“The 500-million-year-old reason behind the unique scent of rain”
i bet the scent of a woman is even older ...
“i bet the scent of a woman is even older ...”
She’d be a bit ripe by now, I think.
For me, thats one of the greatest things about living in the Sonoran desert. I love and miss the smell of the desert after that first rain.
I cant answer that. I do know that I used to live across the street from a cone factory. The first snow really seemed to intensify the vanilla. The next morning the whole world looked and smelled like a giant bowl of ice cream.
Thats interesting! I dont doubt your observation - I bet there is some scientific reason which supports it.
I wasnt there so I suppose that smell of ozone could have been there also but ozone has a very distinctly different smell.
“Nothing better than the smell of sage after a rainstorm in the desert.”
Agreed (from the Sonoran...)
It s in the Bible: Genesis 7:11 (KJV) In the six hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, the seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened.
Where I am, the smell is the sagebrush. Never been a mystery to me.
Oh Oh! It’s a geosmin pandemic... Shut everything down... Pass another multi-trillion-dollar stimulus bribe fund...
I know that....but non-believers think the genesis account is myth.
It is pure truth, explained to the limited minds that we are.
They should add it to air fresheners and room scents.
I would love it even if it smelled like skunk. In Australia we can’t afford to be fussy.
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