Natures wonders: why soils smell like they do (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Monday, April 06, 2020, 23:59 (1692 days ago) @ David Turell

To attract animals to help spread Streptomyces spores:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2239854-soil-gets-its-smell-from-bacteria-trying-t...

"Soil gets its characteristic earthy smell from certain chemicals produced primarily by soil-dwelling bacteria called Streptomyces. But until now, we didn’t know why these bacteria produce these odours and what role they play in the soil ecosystem.

***

"...the smell – which comes from gases released by Streptomyces, including geosmin and 2-methylisoborneol (2-MIB) – seems to attract invertebrates that help the bacteria disperse their spores.

"Becher and his team found that springtails – tiny cousins of insects – that feed on Streptomyces were drawn to the traps containing the bacterial colonies, but weren’t drawn to control traps that didn’t contain Streptomyces. By comparison, insects and arachnids weren’t attracted to the traps containing Streptomyces.

"To see whether the springtails were being lured by the chemicals, the researchers attached electrodes to the springtails’ antennae in the lab, then exposed the animals to geosmin and 2-MIB.

"A spike of electrical activity was detected in the springtails’ brain, but they didn’t show any electrical responses to other test compounds, which suggests they were responding to the chemicals.

"When the researchers studied Streptomyces in the lab, they found that they make more geosmin and 2-MIB when they form spores than they otherwise do. When the springtails approach and eat the bacteria, the spores either stick to the springtails’ bodies or are contained in their faecal pellets and dispersed through the soil.

"Springtails are probably unaffected by Streptomyces‘ toxins because they live underground where they are already exposed to other bacteria, so have evolved detoxifying mechanisms, says Becher.

“'For me, [this] makes so much sense,” says Marie Elliot at McMaster University in Canada.

“'Streptomyces don’t have any direct way of moving these spores to different locations. Attracting creatures like springtails would provide a great way.'”

Comment: All part of a necessary econiche system. This cannot have developed stepwise by chance, but all at once, and can be certainly considered designed.


Complete thread:

 RSS Feed of thread

powered by my little forum