APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Chris, the stuffed toy you posted has got eyes, which the tardigrades seem to be lacking!
Ann
Ann
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- Chris Peterson
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Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Ann- tardigrades have a pair of optical sense organs called eyespots, part of their ventral nervous system. Close enough for me.Ann wrote:Chris, the stuffed toy you posted has got eyes, which the tardigrades seem to be lacking!
Chris
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Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Aye.Chris Peterson wrote:Ann- tardigrades have a pair of optical sense organs called eyespots, part of their ventral nervous system. Close enough for me.Ann wrote:Chris, the stuffed toy you posted has got eyes, which the tardigrades seem to be lacking!
To find the Truth, you must go Beyond.
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
At this url, http://ambergold.ru/news/219/367/Slow-w ... d,Blog_eng the 5-th picture down, is either a Tardigrade eating something, or sticking out a fat tounge.
To find the Truth, you must go Beyond.
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
What is their known life span? Can they be crossbred?
And I guess another curious question could be... why exactly did Fobos-Grunt recently attempt to crash-land these Tardigrades onto the surface of Phobos? Very interesting detail really. Perhaps a better mission in the future could be to land a probe on Phobos (or Mars?) to detect if there are living, existing Tardigrades present?
And I guess another curious question could be... why exactly did Fobos-Grunt recently attempt to crash-land these Tardigrades onto the surface of Phobos? Very interesting detail really. Perhaps a better mission in the future could be to land a probe on Phobos (or Mars?) to detect if there are living, existing Tardigrades present?
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
I wonder if tardigrade are found to survive and thrive inside digestive organs of moss eating animals.
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Hotspot wrote:
From Slow Walkers:What is their known life span?
When environmental conditions start to deteriorate, tardigrades enter a latent state until conditions improve. A latent state is a state in which metabolism, growth and reproduction are reduced or cease temporarily while resistance to environmental extremes (cold, heat, drought, chemicals, ionizing radiation) increases. Tardigrades in a latent state can survive temperatures up to 272°C, high vacuums, ionizing radiation, outer space, and long periods with no oxygen. One tardigrade was revived from its latent state after 120 years! Since aging ceases in the latent state, entering a latent state can greatly increase the life span of the animal. Tardigrades have five routes which they employ to enter latency: encystment, anoxybiosis, cryobiosis, osmobiosis and anhydrobiosis.
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Even more amazing is the third picture from the bottom, I think. This water bear has apparently "shriveled up" due to desiccation. But add some moisture, and hey presto, the water bear "comes alive" and becomes active again.Beyond wrote:At this url, http://ambergold.ru/news/219/367/Slow-w ... d,Blog_eng the 5-th picture down, is either a Tardigrade eating something, or sticking out a fat tounge.
This is what water bears must look like when they are in the ice cold vacuum of space. As people have already pointed out in this thread, water bears do indeed wear their own space suits all the time. Their interiors can become completely dehydrated, but the water bears' thick hides allow the life processes in them to be on hold, rather than to be obliterated.
Amazing.
Ann
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Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
The photo of the tardigrade from March 6 looks artificial. Is
that really a natural tardigrade or a model? The nose ring
looked artifical and some of the "skin" looks like a canvas or
plastic and even the claws looked a little funny. I sent it to a lot of
people and many don't believe it's real. What's the story here?
that really a natural tardigrade or a model? The nose ring
looked artifical and some of the "skin" looks like a canvas or
plastic and even the claws looked a little funny. I sent it to a lot of
people and many don't believe it's real. What's the story here?
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Yes, it's a real tardigrade. Please click on all the links in the explanation. You'll see videos of tardigrades moving, other images, and find additional informative text.
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Check out this link again, http://ambergold.ru/news/219/367/Slow-w ... d,Blog_eng. You can see that the tardigrades are full of really nasty pests which drill holes in the tardigrade's leather-like skin. One tardigrade, in the third picture from the top, is completely overwhelmed by parasites and appears to be either dying or dead.
The tardigrades are as wonderful as before, but they no longer seem so indestructible.
Ann
The tardigrades are as wonderful as before, but they no longer seem so indestructible.
Ann
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Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
I'm sorry. I've resisted the temptation for over two days!
Margarita
"In those rare moments of total quiet with a dark sky, I again feel the awe that struck me as a child. The feeling is utterly overwhelming as my mind races out across the stars. I feel peaceful and serene."
— Dr Debra M. Elmegreen, Fellow of the AAAS
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Resistance was futile, eh Actually, after viewing it, IF i had it, I'd want to post it somewhere to get rid of it, in-a-hurryMargaritaMc wrote:It's life, Jim - but not as we know it...Click to play embedded YouTube video.
I'm sorry. I've resisted the temptation for over two days!
Margarita
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Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
The depths of my appalling taste has yet to be plumbed...Beyond wrote:Resistance was futile, eh Actually, after viewing it, IF i had it, I'd want to post it somewhere to get rid of it, in-a-hurryMargaritaMc wrote:
It's life, Jim - but not as we know it...
I'm sorry. I've resisted the temptation for over two days!
Margarita
"In those rare moments of total quiet with a dark sky, I again feel the awe that struck me as a child. The feeling is utterly overwhelming as my mind races out across the stars. I feel peaceful and serene."
— Dr Debra M. Elmegreen, Fellow of the AAAS
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
haha, living in a vacation spot at the 'bottom' of the world, gives you an excuse. You've just got toooo much time on your hands But don't let that stop you from 'plumbing' the depths of your taste. Up north, we call that being zany, and as you may have already noticed, there are a few 'zany' posters that come and go around here. Makes things interestingMargaritaMc wrote:The depths of my appalling taste has yet to be plumbed...
To find the Truth, you must go Beyond.
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Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Really cool video. Thanks for sharing.Science-Guy wrote:Amazing creatures. I recently did a timelapse video of waterbears emerging from their dormant state "tuns".
I was amazed how fast they became active. I set the time lapse camera to go for 3 hours but they were already very active at less than 20 minutes !
http://youtu.be/rE-6c45DaiI
What magnification was this?
"Any man whose errors take ten years to correct is quite a man." ~J. Robert Oppenheimer (speaking about Albert Einstein)
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Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
It is a scanning electron microscope image that has had color photoshopped in to replicate the actual environment, as electron microscopes produce black-and-white images.houdini that wrote:someone at apod needs to explain the circular appendage by the mouth?
wikipedia does not show anything like that in the buccal tube area.
it looks like a computer generated image that has been photoshopped.
It was considered in great detail, and they applied NASA's standards of planetary protection, including submitting their plans to NASA for review, to ensure accidental contamination would not result. Furthermore, Phobos is an environment inhospitable to life even for tardigrades. They might survive in their dormant state for a while if something went wrong, but they'd never be able to reproduce, and even in their dormant state would eventually die.smitty wrote:Thank you for this helpful information. I continue to believe that intentionally running the risk of seeding extraterrestrial bodies with life forms from Earth is a very bad idea! I hope those in charge of future missions will reconsider.
The goal was not to crash-land. It was to soft-land, do an extensive study of Phobos, then return a soil sample to earth for study. The tardigrades were not the main mission. Just a tag-along.hotspot wrote:What is their known life span? Can they be crossbred?
And I guess another curious question could be... why exactly did Fobos-Grunt recently attempt to crash-land these Tardigrades onto the surface of Phobos? Very interesting detail really. Perhaps a better mission in the future could be to land a probe on Phobos (or Mars?) to detect if there are living, existing Tardigrades present?
We have other missions studying the surface of Mars as we speak. They're not specifically looking for life, because we're not actually expecting to find any on the surface in the present day, but they do have instruments that could give strong indicators life is there if they did encounter it.
"Any man whose errors take ten years to correct is quite a man." ~J. Robert Oppenheimer (speaking about Albert Einstein)
Re: APOD: Tardigrade in Moss (2013 Mar 06)
Margarita, I'm still rolling on the floor!!!
Ann
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