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I don't know if you've noticed, but animals kind of need oxygen.
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That's because animals generally get their energy from cellular structures called mitochondria,
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and those processes require oxygen to work.
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So if somebody stole all of the Earth's O2, things would end pretty quickly around here.
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Except, as it turns out, there are at least some animals that would be perfectly fine.
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Because in 2010, scientists published a paper announcing
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that they'd found three species of them that straight-up don't need oxygen!
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Now, to be clear, not all life needs oxygen.
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There are plenty of single-celled microbes that are anaerobic,
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meaning they can survive just fine without the stuff.
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Instead of oxygen, these organisms can use other molecules like sulfate or nitrate.
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But for years, scientists thought a system like that wouldn't work for animals,
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since their complex, multicellular bodies have higher energy requirements.
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Instead, they thought animals needed the more efficient energy production that takes place in mitochondria.
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And then came that 2010 paper.
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This discovery happened in the L'Atalante basin,
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three thousand meters below the surface of the Mediterranean Sea.
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L'Atalante is a deep hypersaline anoxic basin,
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meaning it's super salty and completely devoid of oxygen.
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It's the kind of place you wouldn't expect to find animals.
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And indeed, when a research team visited three times between 1998 and 2008,
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that's generally what they saw.
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They did find a lot of single-celled organisms living in the basin,
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but most of the animals they saw were dead,
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the result of a so-called “rain of cadavers” from oxygenated waters above.
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Most of the animals, but not all of them.
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Because the team also found an unusually high abundance of tiny, sediment-dwelling animals
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called loriciferans, and they were seemingly very alive.
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Loriciferans are pretty weird creatures to begin with.
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Their heads are covered in spines, and their bodies are typically encased in a vase-like shell called a lorica.
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But finding them in an oxygen-free basin was a whole new level of weird.
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The researchers observed that the loriciferans were still taking up nutrients,
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and that some had recently molted.
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Some even had developing offspring inside them.
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So these animals apparently spend their lives buried in this sediment, with no oxygen,
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not only surviving, but thriving.
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Part of this incredible survival might be down to their size.
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At less than one millimeter long, loriciferans have pretty low energy needs.
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But they also seem to have some unique adaptations.
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For one thing, they don't have mitochondria!
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Instead, they have cellular structures that look a lot like hydrogenosomes.
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These are organelles that some microbes use to produce energy,
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and they use hydrogen ions in place of oxygen.
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Alongside these structures, the researchers also noticed shapes that might be microbes
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living inside the loriciferans' cells.
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That's intriguing because some anaerobic, single-celled organisms also have symbiotic microbes
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that live alongside their hydrogenosomes.
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All in all, it looks like these loriciferans have developed similar cellular structures
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to anaerobic microbes for living in the same way,
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although it's not clear how they did this.
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One option is that they retained these adaptations from an earlier ancestor
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more similar to anaerobic microbes.
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But it's also possible that their ancestors swiped genes from their microbial neighbors,
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allowing them to use the same cellular tricks for survival.
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Of course, this is an extraordinary claim, and some researchers have doubts.
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For example, a study published in 2015 looked in the same basin
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and was unable to find independent evidence of living loriciferans.
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The researchers of the original study are still confident in their results,
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but it may take more confirmation to convince everyone.
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If these results do hold up, though,
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it could change how we understand the requirements of complex life.
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It would have implications for the diversity of animal life in the world today,
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for scientists interested in how life got started on an oxygen-deficient early Earth,
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and maybe even for scientists looking for life elsewhere in the solar system.
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Ultimately, life is so adaptable and endlessly diverse,
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that we wouldn't be shocked if there are more surprises to be found.
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Critical thinking in science is obviously a great thing, though,
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and that's why it's so important for researchers to check each other's work.
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