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Biotech Science

Methane-Eating Bacteria Could Combat Global Warming 218

realwx writes "New Zealand scientists have found a bacterium, named 'Methylokorus infernorum,' that eats a key global warming chemical. Found in a hot spring, the bug lives off of methane emissions from geothermically active areas. A scientist quoted in the article stated that a cubic meter of liquid containing the bacterium would consume about 11kg of methane each year. 'But Dr Stott cautioned that such an application was probably some years into the future. He said it was unlikely the micro-organism, which prefers acidic conditions of about 60C, could ever be added to sheep or cows' food to stop the animals releasing methane.'"
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Methane-Eating Bacteria Could Combat Global Warming

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 23, 2007 @11:37PM (#21459841)
    my wife would appreciate some methane reducing lifeforms to combat my post-Thanksgiving gas venting. I've literally been a musical instrument all day long.
  • Oblig. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Ethanol-fueled ( 1125189 ) on Friday November 23, 2007 @11:38PM (#21459851) Homepage Journal
    From TFS: "He said it was unlikely the micro-organism, which prefers acidic conditions of about 60C, could ever be added to sheep or cows' food to stop the animals releasing methane."

    No, that's what this [beanogas.com] is for!
  • Just burn it? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by BlueParrot ( 965239 ) on Friday November 23, 2007 @11:42PM (#21459865)
    Wouldn't it be better to just collect the methane and burn it to displace coal/oil? Sure, you still get CO2 , but methane has the highest energy yield per CO2 yield of all the hydrocarbons, and it is orders of magnitude cleaner than Coal.
    • Wouldn't it be better to just collect the methane and burn it to displace coal/oil? Sure, you still get CO2 , but methane has the highest energy yield per CO2 yield of all the hydrocarbons, and it is orders of magnitude cleaner than Coal.

      How many cows and/or sheep would I have to keep on the roof of my car to get enough methane to drive to the store?

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by BlueParrot ( 965239 )
        Cows and sheep isn't the only thing emitting methane. Landfills emit it en-masse. Pretty much anywhere you have organic material decomposing without a ready access of oxygen you get methane.
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by dinther ( 738910 )
          Indeed. Just have a look at the decay on the forest floor of all those pristine tropical jungles. I propose we clear those jungles as soon as possible and instead grow corn for Ethanol. As for the rest of the world we need that de-leafing agent "What's the name again?" to clear trees of their leaves in spring so we won't those leaves rotting and emitting greenhouse gasses that kill Polar bears. We all need to do our bit to stop the world from rotating, uh, I mean stop the tide. Oops, I mean stop climate ch
        • They do do that, the limitation presently the size of the landfill. But that is changing the size of the landfill required to make it worthwhile has been shrinking, allowing for the methane to be used to power electric plants and heat homes.

          http://www.epa.gov/lmop/ [epa.gov] is probably a good place to start looking.

          I was pretty much thinking that TFA was pretty dumb since most of the sources of methane which can't be captured for fuel, aren't going to deal well with this sort of technology. The ones that are, can an
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by vvaduva ( 859950 )
      That would make too much sense :) Actually a lot of waste dumps are already collecting the methane released and using it for those purposes. Let's face it - this is BS propagandistic garbage; most likely coming from the same people saying that farting cows are destroying the world. First it was CO2, then it was freon, now it's methane, next will be rich capitalists who need their money taken away as punishment. Nobody is offering any real solutions, only blame. It's politics more than it's real concern f
      • Re:Just burn it? (Score:4, Informative)

        by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Saturday November 24, 2007 @07:25AM (#21461625) Journal
        Methane has a much greater effect on the atmosphere than carbon dioxide, I'm told. If you burn methane, however, you get carbon dioxide and water, so it seems that the solution to the problem is to collect and burn the methane. For bonus points, you also get energy.

        As I see it, the problem is that the cycle is carbon dioxide to long chain hydrocarbons in plants then animals to methane. If you burn the methane, you create a closed cycle, which has no net effect on the atmosphere (you put back the same amount of carbon dioxide you remove). Sequestering methane makes a lot less sense than sequestering carbon dioxide, since you can't easily get energy out of carbon dioxide.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by LadyLucky ( 546115 )
      And precisely how to you anticipate collecting methane from cows (burps, not farts)?

      This is highly relevant for New Zealand as 50% of our greenhouse gas emissions are in fact from cow methane.

      • And precisely how to you anticipate collecting methane from cows (burps, not farts)?

        Collecting the droppings rather than letting them naturally decay, and processing the intestines after slaughter, rather than discarding them.

        Unfortunately, I'm unable to find any sources that state what percentage of methane that would capture. Most every source just bundles all cattle methane emissions together, and often incorrectly labels it all "burping."

    • As a matter of fact, there's very little you have to do in order to remove methane from the atmosphere except wait around a few weeks. It has a very short lifetime once it's in circulation, as opposed to CO2 which, once emitted, is there forever (in human terms) or in geological terms, until it gets chemically locked up in rocks and buried below the ocean floor once again.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 23, 2007 @11:46PM (#21459885)
    If this substance found its way into the food supply, it could be the end of ancient tradition of fart-lighting. The cultural loss would be incalculable.
  • ...but it's still going to be producing some sort of waste. The article didn't mention at all what the bacteria produced as a byproduct of it's methane consumption. It doesn't do us a whole of good if it pops out radioactive sludge now does it. I don't think it should be written off as "vaporware" but this is obviously still very much in it's infancy. The article was very sparse on specifics other than putting out the sensational headline about curing global warming. Check back in a few years.
    • by SeekerDarksteel ( 896422 ) on Friday November 23, 2007 @11:52PM (#21459913)
      I don't think it should be written off as "vaporware" but this is obviously still very much in it's infancy.

      I pretty sure that even if this technology is sufficiently developed it should still be classified as vaporware.
    • and of course, what other side effects are there? We must be careful before we try and fix our meddling by meddling more. Sure. the bacteria is natural, but in what environment?
    • The truth is while methane is a very powerfull greenhouse gass, it washes out of the attmosphere pretty quickly so it really doesn't contribute global warming even if greenhouse gasses do.
      • by farmerj ( 566229 )
        By chance I was at a climate change talk hosted by the Irish EPA [www.epa.ie]. The talk was given by Dr Martin Manning, Head of Technical Support Unit, IPCC Working Group 1, who by chance is as a native of New Zealand. As Ireland is a large livestock producer, one of the questions which came up was why methane produced by ruminants is produces net global warming.

        The way it works is that carbon that's absorbed by the growing plants that the ruminants eat is converted to methane in their rumen. This is then burred by t

  • A Cows Stomach (Score:2, Interesting)

    by elzurawka ( 671029 )
    "Which prefers acidic conditions of about 60C"

    So, im not Biologist, but wouldn't the inside of a cows stomach have lots of acid? And the internal body temperature of a cow is probably similar to a humans. So we have the acid, and we are off by about 20 degrees. I'm sure some geneticist somewhere can figure out how to adapt it to these conditions.

    Another idea may be to put these bacteria into the pools where the manurer is left to decompose?
  • old news (Score:2, Interesting)

    by h2k1 ( 661151 )
    i though that was common sense in the scientific class that the early earth atmosphere composed essentially by metane and other greenhouse-effect gases was modified by these bugs who fixated the gases from the air. maybe one day when the ocean water become 60C these bugs could come to the surface and to the trick again.
  • by postbigbang ( 761081 ) on Saturday November 24, 2007 @12:00AM (#21459965)
    How many liters would have to be put into Capitol Hill each year to offset the methane there.... the mind boggles!
  • by dondonz ( 910642 ) on Saturday November 24, 2007 @12:04AM (#21459989)
    In other news, scientists also discover a way of combatting another major greenhouse gas - carbon dioxide. This newly discovered group of organisms, tentatively called "plants", not only absorbs the carbon dioxide gas, but also produces oxygen AND SOME can be quite tasty in a stir-fry. Further research is continuing, with the hopes these so-called "plants" becoming commercially viable by 2010.
  • by InvisblePinkUnicorn ( 1126837 ) on Saturday November 24, 2007 @12:05AM (#21459995)
    So, 1 cubic meter will take care of 11 kg. How much to take care of our 330 teragram annual emission? A couple dozen cubic kilometers?
    • I would imagine that we not need to cull all of it - this stuff was emitted before mankind existed, too.
    • 1 cubic meter, assuming the same density as water, weighs 1000 kg.

      It can, in turn, process 11 kg - barely 1% of its own mass.

      In a year.

      To use your figure of 330 Tg of methane, that's 30 petagrams of the damn stuff. That's 30 billion tonnes. Volumewise, that's 1/5th of Lake Erie (150 trillion liters - 150 billion tonnes - of water).

      And that's assuming you could get all of the gas in to Lake Erie in the first place.
    • by Ochu ( 877326 )
      Wow, a teragram. What an unusual unit. You'd have thought someone would have invented a way of talking about large metric weights. Some sort of metric equivalent to a ton... say, a tonne. Which would equal about 1000 kilograms, or a 'gigagram'. Why, then we could say that one teragram would be equal to a kilotonne. Which is, y'know, a real unit.
  • by Diddlbiker ( 1022703 ) on Saturday November 24, 2007 @12:12AM (#21460023)
    Because other experiments in the past to release some kind of life form to combat something we deem as inconvenient has worked soooooo well: * introducing rabbits in Australia * introducing foxes to eat said rabbits * crossing European and African honey bees to get the best of both worlds... * snakeheads in Eastern USA * american frogs in europe And about another 1000 examples of introducing animals outside their natural habitat have all worked out so well. So, yeah, let's release those bugs!
    • Shut up and take your Beano.

      :)

    • So, the arguent goes something like this:

      We're breaking everything and the world is going to end thanks to global warming. We know this for 100% sure, because we're so smart. But we shouldn't try doing anything to fix it, because we're so damn stupid.

      Do I have that about right?

      It seems to me the only option left is for us to just die. You go first, the rest of us will follow.

      Really.

      We will.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Diddlbiker ( 1022703 )
        No, you don't have it right. We should do something about global warming.

        But fixing the problem with a solution class that in virtually every single instance where it has been tried ('let's introduce species x') not only failed, but even made things worse, is not a good idea in my mind.

        Solve the problem at the core: stop burning fossil fuels. I don't have incandescent light bulbs in my house for years. When it gets cold, I put on a sweater, and a vest, instead of turning up the heat. I drive 60MPH to wo
        • Solve the problem at the core: stop burning fossil fuels.

          If you think that's an option, you are seriously deluded.

          I don't have incandescent light bulbs in my house for years.

          Me neither, but so what? Eve if every single person were to get rid of incandescent bulbs, the difference in energy use would be infinitesimal, and would be swallowed up by next year's growth in energy demand. Such measures are a good way to save money, but do nothing for the environment.

          When it gets cold, I put on a sweater,

    • But they're so small! What could possibly go wrong? It's not like bacteria can hurt an ecosystem.
    • Not to nitpick (well, actually, yes, I do mean to nitpick), but rabbits were actually released for hunting. You would be correct had you mentioned cane toads, though. Not to say that the rabbits are a good thing---we've introduced viruses to try to control them on two [wikipedia.org] occasions [wikipedia.org], to a certain degree of success.
    • You're deliberately selecting for failures. The entirety of all agriculture is basically the introduction or synthesis and then introduction of new organisms to a given environment to convert solar and chemical energy into useful resources for people. The total cost/benefit ratio to humans of deliberate foreign species introduction is staggeringly in favor of continuing to do so.
  • Human meddling... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by LoadWB ( 592248 ) * on Saturday November 24, 2007 @12:16AM (#21460045) Journal
    Anyone ever get the feeling that we are going to really muck things up by trying to "fix" things? We introduce new species of animal or bacteria to an environment to control naturally occurring beings, then these predators completely take over and become a problem in and of themselves. So and on so forth.

    I have to believe sometimes that we as humans are simply not smart enough, or perhaps do not see enough of the big picture, to understand the intricacies of the world or the universe to implement such grand scale processes.
  • by Wingit ( 98136 ) <mrericdjohnson@nOSPam.gmail.com> on Saturday November 24, 2007 @12:31AM (#21460129)
    Methylokorus infernorum. What consumes it when it gets out of control. I am being corny and soy-ey. (sorry)

    Still, the globe on which we currently reside is going through changes. I am sure we play a part, but let us not get an ego. This planet has known this for some time longer than us.

    Reducing our negative impacts and increasing our positive cannot be wrong by definition in my book. We can only do positive together.

  • ...and it pisses gasoline, right?

    rj
  • It is pointless to try to "change the climate". The earth will do what it's always done, and that is to adapt.

    Humans are also pretty good at adapting, unless the planet undergoes dramatic climate change like it did in that scary movie.
  • could ever be added to sheep or cows' food to stop the animals releasing methane


    It's the ironic world we live in where we have to stop global warming at all costs even by disrupting the natural order of things.

  • Archaea are extremophiles that can turn methane into oil to power our SUVs directly. Incorporate archaea into genetically altered cows to increase their body temperature to a balmy 70 degrees Celsius or so, and cows could be made to pee gasoline, instead of farting methane.

    Nevermind the tiger, put a genetically enhanced cow in your tank.
    • Given that quite a large percentage of these animals are reared for eating, maybe we should just come up with a way to retain and spread the methane in their body. You'd end up with flash-roast steaks - just hold a match to them and blamm - ready.

      You would have to breed rare, medium and well done varieties, of course, but I'm sure a bit of selective breeding would sort that out.

      The only problem is that you'd have to ban smoking near the herd :-).
  • Neil Stephenson's Zodiac. [complete-review.com]
  • Feeding to cattle (Score:2, Informative)

    by bjbest ( 808259 )
    More efficent and easier to mix monensin into cattle feed, as has been done since the early '60s. An antibiotic sold under the tradename "rumensin", it is available as a component of supplemental vitamin/mineral feed mix; available by the bag or by the truckload at your local farm supply outlet. In a cow's stomach, it blocks the digestive microbes from breaking down corn sugar molecules into molecules of acetic acid, cardon dioxide and methane, instead keeping it all as one bigger acid molecule so the bo
    • by WetCat ( 558132 )
      Dark side of use of that antibiotic is that it'll go through milk and meat to humans, thus aggravating a growing problem - antibiotic resistance.
      (There will be less antibiotic cures for people after antibiotic feeds to cows.)
      Global warming is overestimated, antibiotic resistance is underestimated. First one, AFAIK, is a fictional one.
  • What about permafrost and seafloor methane hydrates? That's the real problem,
    and in both cases you ought to be able to at least meet the 60 degree criterion
    easily enough.
  • Instead of letting the methane be consumed by a bug, why not burn the stuff and use the heat for energy?
  • Basically Global Warming is a fact. Pure and simple. I don't care who or what you want to blame, but it's happening, so deal.

    The problem isn't the cows - although they do fart an enormous amount of methane into the air.

    The problem are the clathrates - methane hydrates - that are locked up in the tundra and under the sea. In a nutshell: the tundra has been acting like a giant methane sink for the past several jillion years. If it melts down, and goes quickly, it will release its methane and basically slo

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