極限環境生物学会誌
Online ISSN : 2186-9936
Natural born survivors: mechanisms that allow some animals to be OK in outer space
Gusev O
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ジャーナル オープンアクセス

2014 年 13 巻 2 号 p. 83-89

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For a long time the combination of stresses (vacuum, space radiation, space UV, temperature fluctuations) of outer space was believed to be lethal for terrestrial organisms and, thus, idea of possibility of interplanetary transfer of life was not supported by any experimental evidence. During the last decades, a set of international space research programs (“Expose-R”, “Biorisk 1-3”, “Stone”, “Biopan”, etc.) revealed that some groups of microorganisms and animals are resistant to the outer space exposure and potentially capable to interplanetary transfer, including re-entry into the atmosphere. The absolute majority of the organisms resistant to the harsh outer space environment are presented by anhydrobiotic (even of the Earth capable to surviving without water) species. A midge Polypedilum vanderplanki (a.k.a. the sleeping chironomid) is the most complex, yet believed to be “evolutionary the youngest” animal with ability to anhydrobiosis. The confirmed survival and further reproduction after months of outer space exposure here is a cumulative result of evolutionary traits providing this insect with anhydrobiotic abilities.
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© 2014 Japanese Society for Extremophiles
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