Stephanoceros
Registered Member
Can mushrooms be created asexually? If not, then how is it that the 'largest organism on the planet' (the giant fungus in Oregon)is generating its own mushrooms from the ground?
Can mushrooms be created asexually? If not, then how is it that the 'largest organism on the planet' (the giant fungus in Oregon)is generating its own mushrooms from the ground?
Can mushrooms be created asexually? If not, then how is it that the 'largest organism on the planet' (the giant fungus in Oregon)is generating its own mushrooms from the ground?
That said, can they be transported naturally from one planet to another via debris from a catastrophic collision?...They are among the most diverse lifeforms on the planet.
That said, can they be transported naturally from one planet to another via debris from a catastrophic collision?
Spores are not living cells, and I understand they can survive the vacuum of space (but not so much, UV radiation).
Surviving Space: How Bugs Might Travel Between Planets
Spores are not living cells, and I understand they can survive the vacuum of space (but not so much, UV radiation).
In September 2007, tardigrades were taken into low Earth orbit on the FOTON-M3 mission and for 10 days were exposed to the vacuum of space. After they were returned to Earth, it was discovered that many of them survived and laid eggs that hatched normally, making these the only animals shown to be able to survive the vacuum of space.
Spores are haploid cells, produced by diploid cells that have undergoine meiosis.
I'm reading a section on endospores at the moment and it seems that some of the oldest known spores were found in the stomach of an ancient bee preserved in amber. It is estimated to be around 25-40 million years old. Necessary precautions were taken to prevent any pathogenic outbreak from occurring and the bacteria were revived in a basic growth medium.
(Cano, R. J., and M. K. Borucki. 1995. Revival and identification of bacterial spores in 25- to 40-million-year-old Dominican Amber. Science 268: 1060-1064)
Thank you for that link WLW. A quarter of a billion years and they say this, "The implications of this discovery are rather profound - both for the prospects of life upon other worlds - but also for the possibility of life being swapped between worlds."If you go to the link I posted, you will see that fact referenced in the body of the text. Below is a link that is even more interesting of endospores that were reported to be 250,000,000 years old, preserved in salt crystals, that were viable. See: http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=231