There
Might Be 1 Trillion Species on Earth
By Stephanie
Pappas, Live Science Contributor | May 5, 2016 03:39pm ET
Earth
is home to gobs of species, from tiny to gargantuan, and ordinary to downright
weird. Take this whimsical octopus spotted by NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer's
remotely operated vehicle near Shallop in the Atlantic Ocean.
Credit:
Image courtesy of NOAA Okeanos Explorer Program, 2013 Northeast U.S. Canyons
Expedition
Calculating how many
species exist on Earth is a tough challenge. Researchers aren't even sure how
many land animals are out there, much less the numbers for plants, fungi or the
most uncountable group of all: microbes. Now, researchers have attempted to use
the laws of math to make an estimate that includes both micro
and macro life. The researchers estimated that there may be as many as 1
trillion species out there.
The research is based on scaling laws, which
predict a proportional change linking two variables. For example, scaling laws
apply to the change in metabolic rates as body size changes, and to the number
of species found by geographical area.
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Indiana University researchers Kenneth Locey
and Jay Lennon analyzed data sources that sampled 20,376 sites for bacteria,
archaea and microscopic fungi, and 14,862 sites for trees, birds and mammals.
Using the total abundance of individuals, the researchers were able to work out
the scaling rules that linked the number of individual organisms to the number
of total species. The method led to an estimate of between 100,000,000,000
(that's 100 billion) and 1,000,000,000,000 (that's a trillion) species of
microbes on Earth."Until now, we haven't known whether aspects of
biodiversity scale with something as simple as the abundance of
organisms," Locey said in a statement. "As it turns out, the relationships
are not only simple but [also] powerful, resulting in the estimate of upwards
of 1 trillion species."
Soils
are one of the largest reservoirs of microbial diversity on Earth. Here, the
soil bacteria Actinomyces israelii.
Credit:
GrahamColm at English Wikipedia
It has been estimated that there are 100
trillion individual bacterial cells in a single human body, and a nonillion
(10^30) individual bacterial and archaeal cells on Earth, the researchers wrote
Monday (May 2) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. If these
individuals represent a trillion or so species, that means very little is known
about Earth's microscopic denizens, Lennon said in the statement. The genomes
of only 100,000 microbial species have been sequenced, and only about 10,000
species have been grown in a lab, he said.
"Our results show that
this leaves 100,000 times more microorganisms awaiting discovery — and 100
million to be fully explored," Lennon said. Pinning down exact numbers of
microbial species is tricky, however. Previous estimates have pegged the number
at between 10 million and a billion, according to a 2004 review paper in the journal Microbiology and Molecular
Biology Reviews. A 2011 paper in the journal PLOS Biology put the total number
of species at 8.7 million, but that study's methodology calculated the
existence of only 10,000 bacterial species, a contradiction of the 2004 review
that put the minimum known bacterial species above 35,000. And it's not just
bacteria that are the problem. Even estimates of nonmicrobial species vary
wildly. Researchers reported in 2014 in the journal Trends in Ecology &
Evolution that estimates of the number of species on the planet have
"failed to converge over more than six decades of research." The
estimates range from 0.5 million to 10 million and are often logically
inconsistent, the authors of that 2014 study wrote: "For example,
estimates of species richness for coral reefs have exceeded estimates for
all marine species, and estimates for all marine species have exceeded global
estimates for all realms combined." On the other hand, a study published
in the journal Science in 2013 suggested that where there's a will, there's a
way: The authors said it would cost a mere $500 million to $1 billion a year for 50 years to
describe most species on Earth.
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