 Despite their delicate appearance, the red-and-white vent worms
(Paralvinella sulfincola) studied by WSU's Raymond
Lee thrive in one of
the harshest environments on Earth. Photo courtesy of Bill Chadwick,
Oregon State University and NOAA's Undersea Research.
When Washington State University biologist Raymond Lee set out
to study the most heat-tolerant animals on Earth, he headed, oddly,
for the open ocean off the coast of Washington.
There, with the help of a remote-operated submarine, he found
his quarry: inch-long worms clinging to the sides of hydrothermal
vents on the ocean floor more than a mile below the surface.
The vents are holes in the Earth’s crust where molten minerals
seep out of the planet’s interior, raising the seawater to
near-scalding temperatures and creating a habitat that is home to
some of the oddest, and hardiest, organisms known.
Lee’s special interest is extreme environments, and how animals
and plants have adapted to them. He was intrigued by the vent
worms, because they were reported to live at higher temperatures
than any other animal—60°C (140°F)—and to tolerate brief exposure
to 80°C (176°F). That was based on readings from a thermometer
researchers had inserted via remote control into a worm’s tube-like
covering.
“As evolutionary physiologists, we’re interested in all the
different ways that animals have engineered to cope with their
environment,” says Lee. “Extreme organisms like these have pushed
the limits” of what’s possible, he says.
In the case of the vent worms, Lee thought their reported
tolerance of temperatures of 60°C or higher pushed too far. Most of
the enzymes and other proteins critical to life stop functioning
normally between 45° and 55°. Lee decided to test the worms
himself, by bringing them into the lab—a task just as challenging
in its way as manipulating a tiny probe via robot at the bottom of
the sea.
That challenge was half the fun. Lee loves to build things. In
his lab, power tools outnumber microscopes. He sketched a rough
blueprint for a chamber that would let him keep vent worms at the
intense pressure they’re adapted to. His ideal chamber even had
windows so he could film the worms’ reactions to various
temperatures. John Rutherford, a machinist at the College of
Science’s Instrument Shop, refined the plan.
“They’re very patient,” says Lee of the shop staff. “They had a
scratchy little drawing. John would call me up and say, ‘Did you
mean this? Can you come down here?’ Eventually we got it all
figured out.”
They came up with chambers about the size of a two-pound coffee
can, made of thick Plexiglas inside a heavy aluminum sleeve with
portholes cut into it. With his colleague Peter Girguis of Harvard,
Lee had a remote-controlled sub pull worms off their vent and bring
them to the surface. The worms survived that trip, and Lee
immediately placed them into a chamber and pumped up the pressure.
They did fine there for several weeks—as long as the temperature
didn’t go above 50°C (122°F). The worms became sluggish at 52°C; at
60°C, the temperature previously reported to be their normal
environment, they died within minutes.
Lee then asked whether the worms would stay in hot water if they
had a cooler choice. He went back to his lab/shop and made a longer
chamber that let him heat one end and chill the other. With a
thermal gradient in the chamber, the worms were free to seek their
preferred temperature. They hung out at 50°C most of the time,
occasionally probing the 55°C (131°F) zone but withdrawing after a
few minutes. It was a dramatic demonstration that vent worms really
do “like it hot”—hotter than any other aquatic multicellular
animal—but not as hot as previously reported.
Now, with a new grant from the National Science Foundation, Lee
is studying the physiological processes that enable vent worms to
cope with such high temperatures; and he and Girguis are designing
an infrared instrument that will let them read the temperature of a
vent worm in its natural habitat just by pointing it at the
creature.
Lee says solving the practical problems of studying vent
animals, either in the sea or in the lab, lays the groundwork for
the techniques we’ll need to study creatures from other worlds.
“Vent organisms may be as difficult to deal with as something
from another planet,” he says. “It’s all remotely operated. If we
find something on Mars, it will be the same situation, just a
longer distance.”
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