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🗓️ 1 October 2014
⏱️ 2 minutes
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0:00.0 | This is Scientific Americans 60 Second Science. I'm Steve Mursky. |
0:06.2 | Got a minute? |
0:09.2 | If you want to find unique diversity and if you want to find a wide range of different below ground |
0:15.2 | organisms, you don't have to travel around the world, you can walk across Central Park. |
0:20.6 | That statement comes from Noah Ferrer,ire, an ecology and evolutionary biology professor at the University of Colorado Boulder. |
0:27.0 | He's also a co-author of a study that uncovered the surprisingly large diversity of subterranean microbial life at the 843 |
0:36.3 | acre green rectangle in the heart of Manhattan. |
0:39.5 | The research is in the proceedings of the Royal Society B. |
0:43.0 | Investigators looked at 596 separate soil samples from the park |
0:48.0 | and found thousands of different types of microbes. |
0:51.0 | They also compared those microbes with those living in 52 other soil |
0:55.3 | samples taken from all around the planet. The park had organisms that also exist in |
1:00.7 | deserts, frozen tundra, forests, rainforests, and prairies. |
1:06.0 | Antarctica was the only area that had microbes that did not overlap with those found in Central Park, |
1:12.0 | and only a small percentage of the |
1:14.4 | parks microbes were found to be already listed in databases. The variety of |
1:19.2 | microbes probably reflects a diversity of soil conditions within the park. |
1:24.0 | Seems that New York is a melting pot for people above the surface and for microbes beneath it. |
1:30.0 | Thanks for the minute. For Scientific Americans 60 Second Science, I'm Steve Mursky. |
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