What Planetary Protection Protocols
Do
Arguments
calling for extra caution have permeated Mars exploration strategies and led to
the creation of specific guiding policies, known as planetary protection protocols.
Strict
cleaning procedures are required on our spacecraft before they’re allowed to
sample regions on Mars which could be a habitat for microorganisms, either
native to Mars or brought there from Earth. These areas are labeled by the
planetary protection offices as “Special Regions”
The
worry is that, otherwise, terrestrial invaders could jeopardize potential Mars
life. They also could confound future researchers trying to distinguish between
any indigenous Martian life forms and life that arrived as contamination from
Earth via today’s spacecraft.
The
sad consequence of these policies is that the multi-billion-dollar Mars
spacecraft programs run by space agencies in the West have not proactively
looked for life on the planet since the late 1970s.
That’s
when NASA’s Viking landers made the only attempt ever to find life on Mars (or
on any planet outside Earth, for that matter). They carried out specific
biological experiments looking for evidence of microbial life. Since then, that
incipient biological exploration has shifted to less ambitious geological
surveys that try to demonstrate only that Mars was habitable” in the past,
meaning it had conditions that could likely support life.
Even
worse, if a dedicated life-seeking spacecraft ever does get to Mars, planetary
protection policies will allow it to search for life everywhere on the Martian
surface, except in the very places we suspect life may exist: the Special
Regions. The concern is that exploration could contaminate them with terrestrial
microorganisms.
Can
Earth Life Make It On Mars?
Consider
again the Europeans who first journeyed to the New World and back. Yes,
smallpox and syphilis traveled with them, between human populations, living
inside warm bodies in temperate latitudes. But that situation is irrelevant to
Mars exploration. Any analogy addressing possible biological exchange between
Earth and Mars must consider the absolute contrast in the planets’
environments.
A
more accurate analogy would be bringing 12 Asian tropical parrots to the
Venezuelan rainforest. In 10 years we may very likely have an invasion of Asian
parrots in South America. But if we bring the same 12 Asian parrots to
Antarctica, in 10 hours we’ll have 12 dead parrots.
We’d
assume that any indigenous life on Mars should be much better adapted to
Martian stresses than Earth life is, and therefore would outcompete any
possible terrestrial newcomers. Microorganisms on Earth have evolved to thrive
in challenging environments like salt crusts in the Atacama desert or hydrothermal
vents on the deep ocean floor. In the same way, we can imagine any potential
Martian biosphere would have experienced enormous evolutionary pressure during
billions of years to become expert in inhabiting Mars’ today environmnents.
The microorganisms hitchhiking on our spacecraft wouldn’t stand much of a
chance against super-specialized Martians in their own territory.
So
if Earth life cannot survive and, most importantly, reproduce on Mars, concerns
going forward about our spacecraft contaminating Mars with terrestrial
organisms are unwarranted. This would be the parrots-in-Antarctica scenario.
On
the other hand, perhaps Earth microorganisms can, in fact, survive and create
active microbial ecosystems on present-day Mars – the parrots-in-South America
scenario. We can then presume that terrestrial microorganisms are already
there, carried by any one of the dozens of spacecraft sent from Earth in the
last decades, or by the natural exchange of rocks pulled out from one planet by
a meteoritic impact and transported to the other.
In
this case, protection protocols are overly cautious since contamination is
already a fact.
Technological
Reasons the Protocols Don’t Make Sense
Another
argument to soften planetary protection protocols hinges on the fact that
current sterilization methods don’t actually “sterilize” our spacecraft, a feat
engineers still don’t know how to accomplish definitively.
The
cleaning procedures we use on our robots rely on pretty much the same stresses
prevailing on the Martian surface: oxidizing chemicals and radiation. They end
up killing only those microorganisms with no chance of surviving on Mars
anyway. So current cleaning protocols are essentially conducting an artificial
selection experiment, with the result that we carry to Mars only the most hardy
microorganisms. This should put into question the whole cleaning procedure.
Further,
technology has advanced enough that distinguishing between Earthlings and
Martians is no longer a problem. If Martian life is biochemically similar to
Earth life, we could sequence genomes of any organisms located. If they don’t
match anything we know is on Earth, we can surmise it’s native to Mars. Then we
could add Mars’ creatures to the tree of DNA-based life we already know,
probably somewhere on its lower branches. And if it is different, we would be
able to identify such differences based on its building blocks.Bacterial
species Tersicoccus phoenicis is found in only two places: clean rooms in
Florida and South America where spacecraft are assembled for launch. Mars
explorers have yet another technique to help differentiate between Earth and
Mars life. The microbes we know persist in clean spacecraft assembly rooms
provide an excellent control with which to monitor potential contamination. Any
microorganism found in a Martian sample identical or highly similar to those
present in the clean rooms would very likely indicate contamination – not
indigenous life on Mars.
The Window Is Closing
On top of all these reasons, it’s
pointless to split hairs about current planetary protection guidelines as
applied to today’s unmanned robots since human explorers are on the
horizon. People
would inevitably bring microbial hitchhikers with them, because we cannot
sterilize humans. Contamination risks between robotic and manned missions are
simply not comparable.
Whether
the microbes that fly with humans will be able to last on Mars is a separate
question – though their survival is probably assured if they stay within a
spacesuit or a human habitat engineered to preserve life. But no matter what,
they’ll definitely be introduced to the Martian environment. Continuing to
delay the astrobiological exploration of Mars now because we don’t want to
contaminate the planet with microorganisms hiding in our spacecrafts isn’t
logical considering astronauts (and their microbial stowaways) may arrive
within two or three decades.
Prior
to landing humans on Mars or bringing samples back to Earth, it makes sense to
determine whether there is indigenous Martian life. What might robots or
astronauts encounter there – and import to Earth? More knowledge now will
increase the safety of Earth’s biosphere. After all, we still don’t know if
returning samples could endanger humanity and the terrestrial biosphere.
Perhaps reverse contamination should be our big concern.
The
main goal of Mars exploration should be to try to find life on Mars and address
the question of whether it is a separate genesis or shares a common ancestor
with life on Earth. In the end, if Mars is lifeless, maybe we are alone in the
universe; but if there is or was life on Mars, then there’s a zoo out there.
From: The Conversation
Author: Alberto G. FairénReference:
https://futurism.com/we-shouldnt-worry-about-contaminating-mars-with-earth-microbes/From: The Conversation
Author: Alberto G. FairénReference:

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