January 26, 2012  
_Life Beyond Earth? Underwater Caves In Bahamas Could Give  Clues_ 
(http://tamutimes.tamu.edu/2012/01/26/life-beyond-earth-underwater-caves-in-bahamas-c
ould-give-clues/) 
Discoveries made in some underwater _caves_ 
(http://www.tamug.edu/cavebiology/)  by Texas  A&M University at Galveston 
researchers in the Bahamas could 
provide clues  about how ocean life formed on Earth millions of years ago, 
and perhaps give  hints of what types of marine life could be found on 
distant planets and  moons. 
_Tom  Iliffe_ 
(http://www.tamug.edu/marb/no-show_facultyProfiles/Iliffe.html) , professor of 
marine biology at the Texas A&M-Galveston  campus, and 
graduate student Brett Gonzalez of Trabuco Canyon, Calif., examined  three “
blue holes” in the Bahamas and found that layers of bacterial microbes  exists 
in all three, but each cave had specialized forms of such life and at  
different depths, suggesting that microbial life in such caves is continually  
adapting to changes in available light, water chemistry and food sources. 
Their  work, also done in conjunction with researchers from Penn State 
University, has  been published in Hydrobiologia. 
 (http://tamutimes.tamu.edu/files/2012/01/Mystery-Blue-Hole.jpg)  
A typical Bahamian blue hole entrance pool. (Photo by  Tamara Thomsen)
“Blue holes” are so named because from an aerial view, they appear 
circular  in shape with different shades of blue in and around their entrances. 
There are  estimated to be more than 1,000 such caves in the Bahamas, the 
largest  concentration of blue holes in the world. 
‘We examined two caves on Abaco Island and one on Andros Island,” Iliffe  
explains. “One on Abaco, at a depth of about 100 feet, had sheets of 
bacteria  that were attached to the walls of the caves, almost one inch thick. 
Another  cave on the same island had bacteria living within poisonous clouds of 
hydrogen  sulfide at the boundary between fresh and salt water. These caves 
had different  forms of bacteria, with the types and density changing as the 
light source from  above grew dimmer and dimmer. 
“In the cave on Andros, we expected to find something similar, but the  
hydrogen sulfide layer there contained different types of bacteria,” he adds.  “
It shows that the caves tend to have life forms that adapt to that 
particular  habitat, and we found that some types of the bacteria could live in 
environments  where no other forms of life could survive. This research shows 
how these  bacteria have evolved over millions of years and have found a way 
to live under  these extreme conditions.” 
 (http://tamutimes.tamu.edu/files/2012/01/Iliffe-in-blue-hole.jpg)  
Thomas Iliffe passing through poisonous sulfide layer  in Abaco blue hole. 
(Photo by Tamara Thomsen)
Iliffe says the microbes change where the salt water meets fresh water 
within  the caves and use chemical energy to produce their food. They can 
survive in  environments with very low amounts of oxygen and light. 
There are tens of thousands of underwater caves scattered around the world, 
 but less than 5 percent of these have ever been explored and 
scientifically  investigated, Iliffe notes. 
“These bacterial forms of life may be similar to microbes that existed on  
early Earth and thus provide a glimpse of how life evolved on this planet,” 
he  adds. “These caves are natural laboratories where we can study life 
existing  under conditions analogous to what was present many millions of years 
ago. 
“We know more about the far side of the moon than we do about these caves  
right here on Earth,” he adds. “There is no telling what remains to be  
discovered in the many thousands of caves that no one has ever entered. If life 
 exists elsewhere in our solar system, it most likely would be found in  
water-filled subterranean environments, perhaps equivalent to those we are  
studying in the Bahamas.” 
Over the past 30 years, Iliffe has discovered several hundred species of  
marine life, and has probably explored more underwater caves – at least 1,500 
–  than anyone in the world, examining such caves in Australia, the 
Caribbean,  Mediterranean and North Atlantic regions of the world. 
More can be learned from his website at _http://www.cavebiology.com_ 
(http://www.cavebiology.com) . 
_http://tamutimes.tamu.edu/2012/01/26/life-beyond-earth-underwater-caves-in-
bahamas-could-give-clues/_ 
(http://tamutimes.tamu.edu/2012/01/26/life-beyond-earth-underwater-caves-in-bahamas-could-give-clues/)

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